Keep INVESTING Simple and Safe (KISS) ****Investment Philosophy, Strategy and various Valuation Methods**** The same forces that bring risk into investing in the stock market also make possible the large gains many investors enjoy. It’s true that the fluctuations in the market make for losses as well as gains but if you have a proven strategy and stick with it over the long term you will be a winner!****Warren Buffett: Rule No. 1 - Never lose money. Rule No. 2 - Never forget Rule No. 1.
Showing posts with label How To Make Your First $1 Million. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How To Make Your First $1 Million. Show all posts
Monday, 16 September 2013
Tuesday, 9 July 2013
The income and wealth gap in this country and many others continues to expand. Take the necessary steps to make sure that you and your family are on the right side of the chasm.
Three Steps Toward Financial Freedom
Marc Lichtenfeld | Thursday, April 04, 2013
I was at a school function and had every reason to be depressed…
With kids in elementary and middle school, I was getting an earful from a teacher about everything that’s wrong with education in the school district.
Emphasis on standardized tests, teachers whose work and skill are given no respect and, most shocking of all, the administration insisting to this particular teacher that a nine out of 50 on his history exam is a passing grade (despite his vigorous protests). In other words, a kid who filled out A for every answer of this multiple choice test would pass the course.
This is going on all over the country. We’re failing our kids, graduating young men and women who are not prepared for the real world.
But just as I was feeling pretty awful about the situation, I turned and walked into the exhibit hall. There, several hundred high school kids were up against each other in a robotics competition. These kids were smart. They were motivated. They were boys, girls, black, white, Hispanic and every other race and ethnicity you can think of. They were competing hard against one another, but having a party with each other at the same time.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) was in the hall recruiting. So were Washington University in St. Louis and the U.S. Army. The army wasn’t there looking for infantry. It was hoping to nab some of the country’s brightest young engineers and technologists.
Seeing so many intelligent ambitious kids made me optimistic about the future — but it also got me thinking about differences in “the haves” and “the have-nots.”
In terms of education, these kids were clearly the haves. Not because they came from great schools — some of them didn’t. They were the haves because either a parent or teacher pushed them to grab the opportunities in front of them, or because they were self-motivated. Likely, a combination of the two.
Financially, in the United States, the gap between the haves and have-nots has widened significantly over the years.
According to the Spectrem Group, there are 8.99 million households in the United States worth at least $1 million, up 300,000 in 2012 due mostly to the stock market.
Unfortunately, Americans receiving food stamp assistance is at record levels at 47.8 million.
Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush recently told MSNBC, “We’re no longer socially mobile as a country,” and “You have people that are born poor and there’s a higher and higher probability that they’re going to stay poor. And you have people that are born rich and there’s a greater probability that they’ll stay rich.”
Life isn’t always fair. Sometimes you don’t get that deserved promotion, or an injury or accident hurts your ability to generate income. But if you’re motivated, there are still ways you can ensure your family is among the haves. And you don’t need a ton of money to start.
Here are three simple steps to get you underway:
1. Live below your means and start early
Pretty obvious advice here, but by God it works.
And don’t tell me it’s impossible. When I graduated college, I lived in Manhattan while making $18,000 a year and saved money from every paycheck. While friends of mine were living in high-rises with doormen, I shared a room with a friend in a nasty walk-up apartment. I contributed to a 401(k), had enough for pizza and beer (admittedly, it was bad, cheap beer) and put a few bucks away that I invested and turned into a few more bucks.
Saving and investing money for the past few decades has created a portfolio larger than anything I could have imagined when I was fighting off roaches the size of dachshunds in my New York apartment.
2. Make the right investments
My favorite is dividend stocks. But not just stocks with high yields. I’m more concerned with dividend growth. Here’s a perfect example of why:
This week, Barron’s reported that from 2007 to 2012, the dividends of the S&P 500 grew 14% while inflation totaled 12%. In other words, today, you need $1.12 to buy $1′s worth of 2007 goods. If you received $1′s worth of dividends from S&P 500 stocks in 2007, today you’d get $1.14, so you’re ahead of the game.
Owning Perpetual Dividend Raisers (companies that raise their dividends every year) is the best way, in my opinion, to increase your buying power over time. Whether you take the income today or are saving for decades from now, these stocks ensure you’ll have more money in your pocket that you need to keep up with inflation.
3. Learn as much as you can
There are so many good books and resources out there for investors.
If you’re new to the markets, my favorite book is Understanding Wall Street by Jeffrey Little. This book goes into the basics of what a stock, bond, option and ETF are. If you’re new to investing, I can’t recommend it highly enough.
The Little Book that Beats the Market by Joel Greenblatt is a terrific resource on value investing.
If you like the dividend growth method I mentioned above, Get Rich With Dividends is for you. Written by an author with one of the most insightful investing minds of the past 100 years (OK, it’s me), Get Rich With Dividends shows you exactly how you can generate significant income or wealth by investing in these conservative dividend-paying stocks.
Even if you’re behind, it’s not too late to ensure that in the future you’re a “have” instead of a “have-not.” The income and wealth gap in this country and many others continues to expand. Take the necessary steps to make sure that you and your family are on the right side of the chasm.
Marc Lichtenfeld is a senior analyst at Investment U.
- See more at: http://www.hcplive.com/physicians-money-digest/personal-finance/three-steps-toward-financial-freedom-iu/P-2#sthash.PKnShqWS.dpuf
Friday, 12 April 2013
Thursday, 11 April 2013
David Bach on how to get rich
Financial writer and best selling author David Bach advises how to get rich in his book, "The Automatic Millionaire."
Important point: @ 19 min, 20 min.
Thursday, 19 July 2012
Tuesday, 6 December 2011
Millionaire club: wealth creation tips that work
David Wilson
December 6, 2011 - 10:47AMEddie Machaalani regularly lists “short-term, high-level goals” on a paper sticky note.
Australia has been called the Switzerland of the south. In its Global Wealth Report released this October, Credit Suisse ranked Australians the world's second-richest people, behind the Swiss.
What are you worth? If you feel poor compared to some small business owners you know, here's some rigorous advice on building your wealth.
Two relentlessly self-improving millionaire entrepreneurs reveal the habits that fuel their success.
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Tech titan
Eddie Machaalani, 32, is the co-founder of Surry Hills-basedBigCommerce.com: an e-commerce platform that powers more than 20,000 online stores around the world.
One of Machaalani's key success habits is simple. He routinely lists “short-term, high-level goals” on a paper sticky note he applies to his laptop. He recently used the goal-reinforcement technique in hiring three vital workers - his chief financial officer, chief marketing officer and “vice-president of support”.
“Every time I open my laptop, it makes sure I'm focused on the one most important thing I can do today, this week and this month,” he says.
Besides documenting his goals, he practises all kinds of informal study habits that help him “expand his thinking and learn juicy titbits of information”.
He constantly reads books, listens to audio books and watches DVDs: all on the subject of successful entrepreneurs. One of his favourite television shows is the American-made CNBCTitans, which features entrepreneurs including late Apple boss Steve Jobs and management guru Jack Welch.
Machaalani absorbs all the information wherever he happens to be: in the car bound for work, on the treadmill, and on the exercise bike.
Some of his oomph comes from his love-hate relationship with coffee.
“It makes me super-productive but also knocks my energy levels by the end of the day,” he says. “Thirty minutes on the treadmill in the morning makes me three times more productive and keeps me in a more positive mood all day, without the energy collapse,” he adds.
Trowel power
In contrast to e-commerce wiz Machaalani, Rohan Simmons, 40, works in a gritty field, running the Melbourne plastering firmSouth City Plaster. Simmons's yearly turnover is $3.5 million. His success is embedded in his adherence to a range of rituals.
For a start, Simmons (pictured below) has been seeing a business coach weekly for the past six-and-a-half years. The coaching sessions have taught him to set short-term and long-term goals. He looks up to five years ahead and ensures every step he takes keys into his company's vision, he says.
Another of his productive habits is attending neurolinguistic programming (NLP) seminars run by the coaching group Life Beyond Limits, devoted to overcoming stifling beliefs. According to the website, every excuse for lacking wealth is a “finite belief” that can be changed.
Simmons further enriches his future through attending financial mastery seminars run by the business advice firmActionCOACH].
He also reads and listens to business books including Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill, Hour of Power by Tony Robbins and Blue Ocean Strategy – a look at how to stand out from the pack.
The impact of the informal schooling has been “huge”, he says.
“With education comes confidence - and if you are confident you can make decisions based on knowledge not guesswork,” he says.
No longer does he engage in “self-sabotage”, he adds, explaining that, before he wised up, he worried that hiring new teams would cause more stress. Now, he reckons that hiring staff fuels profit.
So too do his key performance indicators. Think set task completion times, sales targets and conversion rates. Daily, his production team presents him with performance graphs.
The overriding habit that pulls the picture together is consistency. A consistent performance from a small business owner ensures a consistent team performance, he says.
Monday, 31 October 2011
What would you do if you have a million bucks?
Monday October 31, 2011
Monday Starters - By Soo Ewe Jin
WHAT would you do if you have a million bucks? A poor government clerk from Bihar, a remote and poverty-stricken region of northern India, has become the first person to win 50 million rupees (RM3mil) on the popular Indian version of the gameshow Who Wants to be a Millionaire?
Sushil Kumar's win is a classic case of life imitating art as the script is similar to that of the 2008 Oscar-winning film Slumdog Millionaire.
According to the Associated Press, Sushil said he would spend some of his prize money to prepare for India's tough civil service examination, which could lead to a secure and prestigious lifetime job.
He would also buy a new home for his wife, pay off his parents' debts, give his brothers cash to set up small businesses and build a library in Motihari so the children of his village would have access to books and knowledge.
Everyone loves a story like this. Although people can become instant millionaires by striking the lottery or pulling the lever on a one-armed bandit at a casino, using one's talent at a tension-filled gameshow is more admirable.
And I applaud Sushil for his noble attitude in thinking of others to share in his newfound fortune. Bihar is one of the poorest states of India and its remoter areas, such as Motihari, have been largely untouched by India's phenomenal recent economic growth.
Do you know that there are now at least 39,000 millionaires in Malaysia? According to a recent report by the Credit Suisse Group, 19,000 new millionaires were created over the past 18 months alone.
Meanwhile, the Asia-Pacific Wealth Report 2011 by Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Management and Capgemini, also released recently, revealed that Malaysia's rich prefer splurging on a fancy new set of wheels, luxurious yachts or private jets.
Up to 46% invested their ringgit in luxury collectibles like cars, boats and jets, the highest percentage of any country within the Asia-Pacific region.
Their counterparts down south seem less interesting and still prefer jewellery and luxury watches.
I know that the CEOs who read the business section of this newspaper may consider a million ringgit small change but to most of us, it is a very faraway goal, not something one can possibly achieve as a regular salaried worker.
But we can all dream and I was wondering to myself, what would I do if I suddenly had a million ringgit in hand? I suppose our wishes would coincide very much with our age, status, and ultimately our character.
To those who believe material pursuits equate to real happiness, a shopping spree would be fantastic.
Those who do not focus too much on material things may want to travel around the world and complete their Bucket List, which may also include going on a religious pilgrimage.
I believe that God never gives us more than we can handle, just as He never lets us go through trials and tribulations beyond our capacity to endure.
And that was when I stopped dreaming. Because I know, seriously, I will never be able to handle so much money at any one time. So I shall be content and count my blessings. I hope you will too.
What would you do if you have a million bucks?
My comment: Do absolutely nothing for the first one year.
Tuesday, 25 October 2011
Twice as many millionaires in Malaysia over last 18 months
Tuesday October 25, 2011
PETALING JAYA: The number of millionaires has almost doubled in Malaysia over the last 18 months, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported.
Citing a report released this week by international financial firm Credit Suisse Group, WSJ wrote that since early 2010, Malaysia added 19,000 new millionaires, bringing its total to 39,000.
Comparatively, the number in Indonesia increased by 52,000 to 112,000, while the number of Singaporeans worth over US$1mil (RM3.15mil) is 183,000, triple what it was a year ago.
The growth spurt of the nouveau riche has been attributed to the weakening US dollar and stingy pockets.
Compared with the Credit Suisse numbers from early last year, these three countries alone have produced close to 190,000 new millionaires since the beginning of 2010.
However, this figure still fell short of the 212,000 new millionaires in China.
“Much of the rise is just a reflection of the weakening dollar, which makes the Singapore dollar- and rupiah-denominated riches look more impressive when translated into US dollars,” WSJ reported.
“Otherwise, it can be attributed to growing savings, stock and property prices.”
Credit Suisse defines wealth as a person's financial and real estate assets minus their debt.
(Networth = Financial Asset + Real Estate Asset - Debt)
The report also said that the average Singaporean was wealthier in comparison to the rest of the world, with the average household wealth at US$285,000 (RM897,000).
This makes them the fifth wealthiest people in the world after Switzerland, Australia, Norway and France.
Average household wealth in Indonesia, on the other hand, hovered at only around US$12,000 (RM37,771).
“Strong currencies, rising property prices, climbing commodity prices and healthy stock markets have helped the region but the real secret to Southeast Asia's success may be how stingy money makers are here,”WSJ noted.
“Average household debt, which offsets much of savings and investments in Western countries, is very low in the region.
“It is only 13% of total assets in Singapore and 2.5% of total assets in Indonesia.”
Saturday, 10 September 2011
Where are you leading to in your life?
Sometimes, when we look back on the things we had done previously, we will ask ourselves, whether it is worth to do so. There are too many things need to be done in our lives and how should we do?
At the age of 29 years old, I realize that I have spent majority of my time in studying and working. While my hobby is traveling and investing, I recognized that I have long time never touch on piano, table tennis, religion studies, as well as Chinese chess. Those were the activities I often did when I was in my school lives. Now, I have reached another step, where I am going to be a husband. What are the steps I should do? Where am I leading to?
My gf gave me a gift - a cup with the title 'You Never Too Old to Dream'. Until recently, I just realized that the person who can give you most encouragement is nobody but yourself. You must think out of box to achieve what you want in your life.
As my goal, I want to achieve financial freedom, setup a charity trusts and travel around the world. Of course, I already set a dateline to myself. I must be a millionaire before 35 years old.
After that, I will use that 1M to generate more 1M. But How?
Some of my ideas here:
Marry to a rich girl - Looks impossible, as I already engaged. Haha. :)
Win a lottery - Too bad, my luck is always not that good. So I give up on this. :)
Work hard and climb in the corporate ladder - Given my character, I hate to fight with other colleague but I love working with them peacefully. So, I don't think I can be a CEO within 5 working years. :)
Be own boss - setup a new company. Given my current experience and capital, it is a bit hard to do it right now. But I believe I can do it soon after my capital reaches 1M. I always believe that I can be a rich man. There is no doubt in it.
Through Investing - I have about 10 years experience in investing in shares in year 1998. Year 1998 and 2008 was a bad year to me. Since then, I achieve reasonable returns through investing via High Growth Company. ROE is the key indicator that I use for investment. However, due to the small capital and reinvested capital (I am not a high paid guy, so my initial invested capital was very small. Thankfully, my current invested capital reached 6 figures and I definitely believe that I can be millionaire in my 30s.
Of course, I definitely believe that you have your own way to go. Share with us your ideas on where are you leading to in your life in below comments.
Good luck!
http://www.jackphanginvestment.com/2011/05/where-are-you-leading-to-in-your-life.html
Tuesday, 16 March 2010
Through Understanding the Power of Compounding, ANYONE can become rich if they start an investment plan EARLY in life.
It is not so much the increase in future value (FV) over the early 10-year periods of the savings plan, but the increase over the final 10-year period that yields the big bucks.
For instance, if we reference the compounding at 10 percent,
The greatest deterrent to an investment plan is not so much the fortitude to put aside a small percentage of income, but the willpower not to steal from the fund until your regular employment income ceases. Anyone can become rich if they start an investment plan early in life.
http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2008/11/understanding-power-of-compounding.html
Slow and consistent accumulation through the power of compounding.
Investing is not about making a quick kill, but slow and consistent accumulation through the power of compounding.
Sometimes, exceptional results will occur through
Most individuals trading in highly leveraged futures are eventually wiped out by their lack of staying power when exceptional price volatility extinguishes their small percentage of equity.
Also read:
1. Uncle Chua's Portfolio & Dividend Income
Here is Uncle Chua's portfolio & dividend income, reproduced here as accurately as was depicted in the book: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=r5DhwS2nWTiIAK0pDCIPD-Q
The important lesson here is to realize the power of regular investment and compound returns. When you invest in good things and you invest regularly, your wealth will eventually multiply.
For instance, if we reference the compounding at 10 percent,
- FV increased by $41,338 between years 10 and 20,
- while the increase between years 40 and 50 was $721,316.
The greatest deterrent to an investment plan is not so much the fortitude to put aside a small percentage of income, but the willpower not to steal from the fund until your regular employment income ceases. Anyone can become rich if they start an investment plan early in life.
http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2008/11/understanding-power-of-compounding.html
Slow and consistent accumulation through the power of compounding.
Investing is not about making a quick kill, but slow and consistent accumulation through the power of compounding.
Sometimes, exceptional results will occur through
- the catch-up process of buying underpriced stocks or
- excessive market pricing,
Most individuals trading in highly leveraged futures are eventually wiped out by their lack of staying power when exceptional price volatility extinguishes their small percentage of equity.
- Losing a bet in which you can be 100 percent right with your choice but 1 percent wrong with the timing doesn't seem very good odds.
- Making money is nice, but peace of mind is much more valuable.
Also read:
1. Uncle Chua's Portfolio & Dividend Income
Here is Uncle Chua's portfolio & dividend income, reproduced here as accurately as was depicted in the book: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=r5DhwS2nWTiIAK0pDCIPD-Q
2. The Story of Anne Scheiber
http://www.horizon.my/2008/11/the-story-of-anne-scheiber/
Maxwell recounts the story of Anne Scheiber, an elderly and thrifty lady who lived in New York and worked for the Inland Revenue Service. When Scheiber retired at age fifty-one, she was only making $3,150 a year. She was treated poorly by her employer and was never promoted. Yet when Anne Scheiber died in 1995 at the age of 101, it was discovered that she left an estate to Yeshiva University worth US$22 million!
How did a public service worker with minimal salary accumulate such a staggering wealth?
3. *****Long term investing based on Buy and Hold works for Selected Stocks
It sure beats FD rates and it is safe too.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=tWENexpUrXS_RMxB7k73RgQ&output=html
http://www.horizon.my/2008/11/the-story-of-anne-scheiber/
Maxwell recounts the story of Anne Scheiber, an elderly and thrifty lady who lived in New York and worked for the Inland Revenue Service. When Scheiber retired at age fifty-one, she was only making $3,150 a year. She was treated poorly by her employer and was never promoted. Yet when Anne Scheiber died in 1995 at the age of 101, it was discovered that she left an estate to Yeshiva University worth US$22 million!
How did a public service worker with minimal salary accumulate such a staggering wealth?
3. *****Long term investing based on Buy and Hold works for Selected Stocks
It sure beats FD rates and it is safe too.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=tWENexpUrXS_RMxB7k73RgQ&output=html
Sunday, 13 September 2009
Virtually anyone can evolve into a millionaire
Mathematics also shows us that virtually anyone can evolve into a millionaire through patient, diligent investing.
An individual who socks away a few thousand dollars every year starting at the age of 21 can easily amass $1 million by retirement. The power of time and the power of compounding ensure that any individual who can save money consistently can attain a decent degree of wealth by the age of 65 or 70.
If that same individual can manage to save an extra few thousand dollars more each year, the pile of assets attained at retirement would be much larger.
If that individual manages to earn a few extra percentage points of gain each year, either through good stock-picking or wise account management, the amount of money earned at the end is many times greater.
An individual who socks away a few thousand dollars every year starting at the age of 21 can easily amass $1 million by retirement. The power of time and the power of compounding ensure that any individual who can save money consistently can attain a decent degree of wealth by the age of 65 or 70.
If that same individual can manage to save an extra few thousand dollars more each year, the pile of assets attained at retirement would be much larger.
If that individual manages to earn a few extra percentage points of gain each year, either through good stock-picking or wise account management, the amount of money earned at the end is many times greater.
Wednesday, 19 August 2009
How To Make Your First $1 Million
The Three Ps
Persistence, patience and purpose are common traits that you'll find in every millionaire from John Jacob Astor to Bill Gates. Even though inflation has brought the value of $1 million down from its lofty perch, you still need these traits to reach it. Why isn't everyone a millionaire? Maybe because it is easier to spend now, buy big and put off saving and investing than it is to sacrifice to reach the goal of becoming a millionaire. Using the tips given here can help you on your way, but you have to be brave enough to take the steps - first, final and all the hard ones that lay in between.
http://investopedia.com/slide-show/millionaire-mindset/
http://investopedia.com/Slides/LastSlide.aspx
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Increase Your Income
There is nothing terribly romantic about becoming a millionaire while working a regular job, but it is probably the avenue available to most people. You don't need to start your own business to pull in a high income, and you don't even need to pull in a high income if your saving, spending and investing habits are sound. Asking for a raise, upgrading your skills or taking a second job will add that much more to your savings and investments and subtract that same amount from the countdown to your first million. If you are entrepreneurial at heart, starting a business on the side can actually decrease your overall tax bill, rather than putting you in a higher income tax bracket. (See Increase Your Disposable Income for more.)
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Reconsider Real Estate
Owning real estate provides equity and diversity to your investments. If you own your own home, then paying your rent builds up equity. If you invest in real estate, then someone else's rent builds up your equity. Real estate investing isn't for everyone, but it has built fortunes for many savvy people. Owning your own home, however, is usually a good idea regardless of your opinion on real estate bubbles. Peter Lynch, one of the greatest stock investors of all time, believed that you should own your first home before you buy your first stock. (If you feel ready, see Investing In Real Estate for more.)
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Dare To Diversify
If your portfolio is made up entirely of American companies or is even all held in stocks, then you may need to diversify. In the first case, more and more financial activity is out there in the wider world. This doesn't just mean investing in emerging economies like China and India that are producing huge gains, but recognizing that there are companies in Europe and Asia that are just as good (maybe better) as investments in the U.S.. Diversifying also means not putting all your money into one type of asset. Being a financial omnivore opens up that much more opportunity in times of growth and makes certain you won't go hungry when one source dries up. (See The Importance Of Diversification for more.)
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Incremental Investing
If you've got your retirement portfolios where you want them and are ready to start a pure income portfolio, then incremental investing is an excellent way to begin. You don't have to jump into the market with your life savings to make money. Even relatively small amounts can result in decent returns. The important thing to remember with your income portfolio is that capital gains taxes will be applied yearly to any income you pull out. Again, improving your tax awareness will help reduce the bite, but it takes time and knowledge to make one million solely from a taxable portfolio. Still, it has been done and will be done again. (See Investing 101 to get started.
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Ramp-Up Your Retirement Savings
Rather than letting your boss's contribution lessen your load, try to put a little extra into your retirement plan whenever you can. Automating your account contributions will make setting your money aside that much easier. That said, making extra contributions a priority will speed up your journey to $1 million and make your golden years that much more golden. You don't have to eat cat food to do this, just keep your retirement in mind when you've got extra cash on hand. (For more in this vein, see Playing Retirement Catch-Up.)
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Build Through Your Boss
If you're looking to save $1 million dollars for retirement, look no further than your boss. With matching contributions, your employer can be your best ally when it comes to building up retirement funds. If you think you need to squirrel away 20% of your income for retirement and your boss puts up 6% in matched contributions, then you're left with a much more manageable 14%. Even if you are your own boss, there are still options under SEPs. (For more on this see Making Salary Deferral Contributions.)
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Crafty Compounding
Time is on your side when you've got compounding working on your savings. The earlier you start saving and the earlier you get your savings into a financial instrument that compounds, the easier your path to $1 million will be. You may be thinking of tenbaggers or hot issues that return 10 times their value in a few weeks, but it is the boring, year-on-year compounding that builds fortune for most people. (To learn more, read Compound Your Way To Retirement.)
How To Make Your First $1 Million
Target Your Taxes
Another leaky hole you need to plug is the parasitic drain of big government. While you are expected to pay your taxes, it's the right of every taxpayer to try and reduce their tax bills to the absolute minimum allowed by law. Increasing your tax awareness means making taxes a quarterly chore rather than an annual scourge. Keeping abreast of allowable deductions, changes to your withholding and changes in tax limits will allow you to keep more of what you earn, so that you can put that money to work for you. (See 10 Steps To Tax Preparation for more.)
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