Your Path to Salary Independence
56 pages
English

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56 pages
English

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Description

There are just three things you need to know about to achieve salary independence. This book will help you identify those three key points that will help free you to do what you want and when you want to do it.

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Publié par
Date de parution 06 avril 2023
Nombre de lectures 10
EAN13 9781543773620
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

YOUR PATH TO SALARY INDEPENDENCE
How Anyone Can Control Their Financial Destiny
Dr. David Kuo


Copyright © 2023 by Dr. David Kuo.
 
ISBN:
Softcover
978-1-5437-7361-3

eBook
978-1-5437-7362-0
 
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
 
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
www.partridgepublishing.com/singapore
CONTENTS
Dedication
About the Author
What this book is all about
Introduction
 
Chapter 1Where do I begin?
Chapter 2How to get started
Chapter 3What do I buy?
Chapter 4Choosing our shares
Chapter 5Stock picking made easy - Income shares
Chapter 6Stock picking made easy - REITs
Chapter 7Stock picking made easy - What about bonds?
Chapter 8Stock picking made easy - Growth shares
Chapter 9Stock picking made easy - Value shares
Chapter 10Index trackers
Chapter 11Building a portfolio with trackers
Chapter 12Building the portfolio from scratch
Chapter 13Rebalancing the portfolio
Chapter 14The finishing line
Chapter 1550 dos and don’ts of the salary Independencefund

DEDICATION
This book is dedicated to my parents who taught me from a very early age that if a person cannot control their money, then they will never be able to control their life.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
David Kuo is a scientist at heart. He read Chemistry at Imperial College London and went on to gain a PhD by investigating the transport of hydrocarbons through polymer membranes.
He admits that it wasn’t the sexiest of topics. But he said it did give him an opportunity to play around with some of the first-generation personal computers of the 1970s, improve his machine-code programming skills, understand how microprocessors worked, and he even managed to make dry water in his spare time.
After graduation, David worked in the family business in Hong Kong before spending a seven-year stint as a turf accountant at Ladbroke in the heart of the UK’s horse-racing scene in the West Country. He left the fast-money gaming industry to pursue something more sedate.... a career in the stock market.
At the turn of the Millennium - just before the implosion of the dot.com bubble - he joined The Motley Fool in London where he honed his skills in financial journalism, broadcasting, investing and market analysis.
His no-nonsense, straight-talking views could be heard on the BBC, CNBC, Bloomberg, Al-Jazeera, and Fox. He was a co-host on The Danny Baker “All Day Breakfast Show” on BBC London where he brought his unique take on financial matters every weekday morning. He wrote a column in The Independent on Sunday.
He went on to become Head of Personal Finance before launching The Motley Fool’s Asian outpost in Singapore. With his grounding in UK broadcasting, David’s views about financial matters found their way onto BBC World Television, CNBC, and radio stations such as BBC World Service and London’s Talk Radio.
He wrote a regular column called A Fool’s Eye View for Singapore’s daily newspaper The Straits Times, and currently contributes to The Business Times under the banner “Diary of a Private Investor”. He comments regularly on financial issues on regional TV network, CNA, formerly Channel News Asia.
In 2020, David co-founded The Smart Investor Singapore to continue his mission of helping private investors invest for themselves for the long term. He passionately believes that the best person to manage our money is ourselves, because only we can truly know what we want. He sits on the Singapore Exchange Investor Education Committee that promotes financial learning.
WHAT THIS BOOK IS ALL ABOUT
Investing is nothing more than delayed spending. If we can manage to resist the urge to splurge today, then we can afford to get something bigger and better tomorrow. But we need to control the temptation to whip out our wallets and, instead, invest our money carefully.
If we burn through everything we have today - and thanks to credit cards, we can even spend next month’s money today - then we will have nothing left for tomorrow. In some cases, we could even end up with less than nothing tomorrow.
Just as investing is delayed spending, using credit cards irresponsibly, is spending tomorrow’s paycheque today. What on earth are we going to do when next month arrives? Spend the following month’s money? That’s how debt piles up, and why many people cannot get on the road to salary independence.
That really is the essence of investing.... a big dollop of jam tomorrow rather than the instant gratification of a thin smear of strawberry preserve today. Investing is not about getting rich quickly, but instead it is about enjoying getting sustainably richer, slowly. At least, that’s how I want you to think about investing.
In order to do that, we need to know where we are now, where we want to be at a future date, how we plan to get to our destination, and what we should do when we get there.
If you fail to plan, then you plan to fail
To reach our destination, we will need a plan - preferably a road map with clear signposts. This book will provide you with a guide to invest the right way that will lead you to salary independence, which, by the way, is not the same as financial independence.
Point is, we can never be totally financially independent, that is unless we choose to live on a desert island and spend our time fishing for our supper and plucking coconuts from trees.
Sounds really idyllic, doesn’t it? But the romance could quickly wear off when we run out of recipes that require coconuts and fish. I can think of half a dozen off the top of my head, but that’s about it. So, let’s scrub the desert-island idea.
We can, however, reach a point where we are no longer entirely reliant on a monthly paycheque. We can only do that if we are truly salary independent. We can only make that dream a reality if we have the means to control our own financial destiny.
So, salary independence is about being able to choose for ourselves who we would like to work for, when and where we want to work, or if we even want to work at all. Does that sound good to you? It is empowering. It is liberating. It is healthy for our minds and bodies.
Salary independence is about choosing when and how we are going to receive our income. By being in control of our investment portfolios, we have the ability to shape our investments so they can deliver growth when it is needed, and to produce income when it becomes crucial.
No jargon. No gobbledegook
This book will help us become salary independent. It is jargon-free, which, by the way, is not the same as being dumbed down or light on detail. Far too often, books on finance are jam-packed with equations and slang.
You won’t find the Gordon growth model derived from first principles here. Heaven only knows why anyone would even want to try to do that. But you will find out how to put together a robust portfolio of shares that could deliver income and growth based on Myron J. Gordon’s principles.
On that point, my former editor at the Motley Fool in the UK, Martin Wake, gave me a valuable piece of advice when I was submitting my first piece of writing.
He said that when writing about finance, the article should be easily understood by my son and daughter who were in primary school at the time, and my mother and father. It should never be a treatise to show off how much I know about finance.
I have taken his advice to heart. Far too often, financial experts wrap themselves up in gobbledegook. Not here. This book will break down the jargon into easy-to-understand concepts that will give you the confidence and courage to go it alone afterwards.
Truth of the matter is that investing is not hard. Anyone who can add, subtract, multiply and divide should be able to invest on their own, manage their own portfolio, and achieve their dream of salary independence.
INTRODUCTION
If you have got this far, then it means that you have read the earlier sections about me, and why I have written this book, and how it can help you.
If you haven’t, then please start there first. Not reading the first two sections is akin to assembling flat-pack furniture without checking the instructions.
We have only ourselves to blame when we discover that the drawers for our bedside table don’t work because we have two left-sided rails instead of a left and a right. I’ve been there. I know what it is like. I don’t want you to go through the same pain.
So, don’t risk going off the rails. We shouldn’t if we remember to just keep things simple.
That’s more than enough preamble. Let’s get cracking with the basic concept of investing.
Same but different
Have you ever wondered what is the difference between saving and investing? Some people might think that they are one and the same. They are definitely similar but at the same time they are quite different.
Saving is something we do to accumulate money for something we need in t

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