Sunday, January 25, 2015

Great New Business Opportunity - Join Me!

A trusted and very successful friend of mine recently told me about a way you can take some of your paper money and replace it with the world's only real money - Gold. This is possible in amounts as small as 1 gram of Gold = only an approximate $60 U.S. Dollars. Karatbars is the company's name and it is based in Stuttgart, Germany. It is now active in over 120 countries worldwide.

Not only can you buy small amounts of 24 karat, currency-grade gold, you can also earn extra cash in the form of commissions as a Karatbars affiliate. Best of all, this is NOT
MLM! There are no monthly autoships, no sales quotas, and no cult-like company culture.

However, you can see solid commissions quickly and help the affiliates you enrol with Karatbars become successful and reach their goals in life.

Have a look at my landing page here https://www.karatbars.com/landing/?s=buildrealwealth for more information or email me!

If you would like to know more in a no-hassle, pressure-free way, email me, David Neyens, directly at davidneyens1@gmail.com. You can also see me on facebook in the Karatbars - Build Real Wealth community. When you are there, check out the informative and easy-to-understand posts and be sure to share them and like my page!






Sunday, September 6, 2009

What I Didn't Learn in Economics 020

Many more years ago than I care to disclose, I was a first-year student at the University of Western Ontario, better known to many as UWO. Of course, I was filled with great optimism on my very first day of lectures at this most venerable of Canadian universities.

However, my enthusiasm quickly turned into disillusionment, as our dour Economics professor skulked about the lecture theatre, with her self-satisfaction and abundant sarcasm. Obviously, my classmates and I were being graced by the presence of an intellectual luminary, who had just written a textbook. Actually, it was still a manuscript, awaiting further editing and perfection before it would be published in hardcover form and placed on the shelves of what our good professor believed would be the campus bookstores of every post-secondary institution in the world.

Of course, I was humbled. After all, I was awash in the glow of the professor's obvious stature. Suitably impressed with the value I was already receiving in exchange for my hard-earned yet heavily-subsidized tuition payment, I realized that I was in the presence of an intellectual giant, who was well on her way to becoming published.

Well anyway, to make a long story short, the professor sternly let the class, an overcrowded lecture theatre clearly intended for about 50 fewer students than the number that signed up for the course, in on the basic tenet of economic theory, a school of thought known appropriately enough, as the "dismal science". I think this summation clearly matched her mood, which apparently was the product of too many years of lecturing first-year students like me. An occupation, in fact, which kept her from fulfilling her true purpose as an author of a landmark and highly-acclaimed first-year Economics text.

The basic tenet, the "Rosetta stone", if you will, of economic theory, was this: "There is no free lunch." I immediately thought that she was full of crap. I've had lots of free lunches. On our farm growing up, one simply had to walk about 30 feet behind the house to the garden, where a veritable cornucopia of fruits and vegetables awaited. Many friends and their families served me lunch, dinner and breakfast for that matter. Cognitive dissonance set in, just in time for the next pearl of wisdom to be imparted on the class: "Economics is the study of scarce resources and unlimited demand."

My faith in the good professor was broken from this moment on. The course, which I had to repeat the next year, was an endurance test, filled with vitriolic diatribe, sarcastic remarks, and moments of sheer verbal cruelty. Oh, did I forget, we also had to buy the professor's "manuscript" as our course textbook, not even a "real" textbook! Of course, she would receive royalties for each copy sold. More on my opinions of professors, publishing and textbook sales at universities later. Anyway, the professor's comments about scarcity did serve a good purpose. They made me think. Think for myself. I critically appraised everything I was told ever since.

Over the intervening 21 years since that first Eco 020 lecture, I have arrived at the following conclusions: yes, there is a free lunch, and resources are not scarce. There is abundance. Of everything, for everyone who is willing to see it.

If the supply of resources is indeed limited or finite, then people like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Warren Buffett or Jim Balsillie and his business partner (apologies for forgetting his name, but I'm on a roll) for that matter, would not have revolutionized how we interact, communicate and do business. These three individuals have created more wealth for themselves and for millions of other people, than my Eco 020 professor could have possibly dreamed. They have created wealth and abundance and convenience for the world. And they have rightly profited from their inspired creations. And we can too. Join me on a journey of discovery, where we will explode the myths about the current economic meltdown and examine ways to build wealth in any market, during any part of the economic cycle.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Welcome!

Welcome to my first blog post! As suggested by the title, we will explore the world of alternative assets and investments, with a special focus on wealth creation and preservation. Let's face it. In today's world, in the wake of the succession of high-profile stock market flameouts and frauds of the late 1990s-2000s including Bre-X, Nortel, Enron and Worldcom among many others, "buy and hold" just doesn't work as a strategy anymore.

At least monthly (possibly more frequently), as time permits, I will discuss the investment merits and pitfalls of alternatives to traditional stock market and mutual fund-based investments, with an emphasis on providing solid, "nuts-and-bolts" information that your bank or investment advisor might be reluctant to discuss. I will also discuss mortgages and loans, the process that lenders use to qualify you for credit, and yes, debt management.

I'll also examine investor psychology, socially responsible investing, fiat-based currencies, hard assets, emerging technologies and much more. From time to time, I will also post interviews with various personalities in the alternative-asset arena that I know you will want to hear.

Have a question? Ask me and I will attempt to break it down for you, or at least get the opinion of an expert for you.

I look forward to providing entertaining, opinionated and useful content going forward, and to meeting you online! The opinions expressed here will definitely not be what you're used to hearing.

David C. Neyens