Disaster Planning
We’ve seen the pictures, we’ve heard the stories. Hurricane Harvey pounded Houston over the weekend, with many other parts of Texas and Louisiana hit hard as well.
We’ve seen the pictures, we’ve heard the stories. Hurricane Harvey pounded Houston over the weekend, with many other parts of Texas and Louisiana hit hard as well.
There once was a time when the threat of nuclear war hung over America’s head like a storm cloud that just wouldn’t go away. Those days, thankfully, are long over—but the sky turned a little bit grayer last week.
Over the last two months, I’ve discussed something called Newton’s Laws of Finance. They’re my spin on Sir Isaac Newton’s famous “Laws of Motion” that you probably learned about in school.
In the world of investment management there is an oft-discussed idea that blindfolded monkeys throwing darts at pages of stock listings can select portfolios that will do just as well, if not better, than both the market and the average portfolio constructed by professional money managers
In our last blog, I introduced Newton’s Laws of Finance. They’re my spin on Newton’s famous “Laws of Motion” that you probably learned about in school.
When you were in school, you probably learned about Newton’s Three Laws of Motion. First published by Sir Isaac Newton in 1687, these laws explain how physical objects move.
Costs matter. Whether you’re buying a car or selecting an investment strategy, the costs you expect to pay are likely to be an important factor in making any major financial decision.
That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States. So said the resolution presented before the Second Continental Congress on June 7, 1776.
As a financial advisor, I’d like you to take thirty seconds to read this story by the legendary fabler, Aeso
Every investor should have an emergency fund. What is an emergency fund?