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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. |
Resources
You Might Need - Sean Toh
Manifest Money
This program
will help you to understand your
relationship with money and more
importantly, how to create a new one. It’s
important to get in touch with some of the
limiting beliefs that you may have that have
been preventing you from having unlimited
potential when it comes to abundance.
 |
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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Seven Steps To
Preserve Your Wealth
There are plenty of ways of preserving wealth in real
terms, protecting against most of the uncertainties
that may threaten it and allowing you to sleep
comfortably at night.
Those who aim to preserve wealth during their
lifetime, as opposed to passing it on intact to their
children, do not need mind-bogglingly complex legal
trusts, tax scams or hiding assets overseas.
There are all manner of professionals who make a fat
living by persuading the wealthy that they must set up
such schemes and as Hutchence’s family discovered,
the effects on their wealth can occasionally be far
worse than even the most draconian tax regime.
What follows is not detailed investment advice (as a
journalist, I’m not authorised to provide that) but
it is a common sense outline for further planning that
will leave you in control, and your overheads and time
spent in administration at an absolute minimum.
Seven reasons we are scared to invest
1. Tot it up
First, you need to establish the value of your money
and assets. That’s easy enough for shares, property,
cash, antiques and so on.
It’s harder for such things as share options in an
employer, part holdings in private businesses or other
assets which may be hard to realise at a given time,
or whose value may be volatile.
A very conservative valuation should initially be
attached to any such assets.
2. Set realistic objectives
Setting your objectives is an absolutely vital step.
If your goal is wealth preservation, that means
accepting that long-term sustainable increases in the
real value (ie post-inflation) of your assets is
likely to be low single figures, almost certainly
below 5%.
It is always possible to go for more, but not much
more without raising the risk profile. The risk-free
return on lending to the Treasury, as measured by
index-linked gilt yields, is currently 1.3% to 1.5%
plus RPI inflation which is a good basic benchmark to
start at.
While that may appear low, it is worth bearing in mind
that the best performing long-term asset, shares, has
only averaged 5% plus inflation over the last century
or so. That return comes with a fair slice of risk,
certainly for investment horizons of a decade or less.
3. Assess your risks
This is probably the single most important element of
the entire plan.
Unidentified risks are a far greater threat to your
wealth than tax. While tax may threaten a proportion
of your wealth, poorly-identified risks can destroy it
all.
This doesn’t just mean the asset risks within your
investment portfolio, such as the proportion of
government bonds to shares, or whether you have too
much money tied up in junk bonds, but the whole
financial context of your life.
Typical questions to ask yourself include: What
happens if my employer goes bust? What happens if a
financial services provider I have invested with
collapses or is unable to meet its promises? Is my
occupation pension secure? What happens if an elderly
relative has to go into residential care? What happens
if I divorce? Do I have enough personal, property and
illness insurance?
Listing these risks, working through their
implications and attaching a probability to them may
be depressing, but it can help clarify the issues.
4. Adjust for the unexpected
Not all risks can be negated as easily as, say,
inadequate property insurance cover. An employer
bankruptcy is always going to be a disaster, but even
more so if you have a home loan funded by them or if
all your wealth is tied up in share options.
Attractive as the next tranche of cheap options might
be, it might pay to put the money elsewhere. You can
also hedge the value of existing options through
“down bet” contracts for differences or spread
bets.
Those who spend a lot of time travelling may find it
makes sense to have overseas bank accounts in the euro
and dollar and more deposited than is required for
day-to-day expenses.
This not only protects against the transaction charges
and absurdly wide spreads on piecemeal currency
conversion, but in the remote chance of another
sterling collapse like Black Wednesday 1992, it would
help soften the blow because your wealth is spread
across a number of currencies.
5. Never forget inflation
Inflation consistently nibbles away at the value of
certain investments.
Government bonds (gilts), the foundations of
conventional wealth-preservation are badly damaged by
inflation.
That is why conventional gilts (still an important
part of any wealth-protection portfolio) should be
balanced by a portion of index-linked gilts whose
payout rises in line with inflation.
Those who own property have some in-built protection
against inflation, but there are sometimes times (as
now) when the price of everything but property seems
to be rising.
6. Don’t under-estimate the effect of
charges
Even modest charges can eat away at your investment
returns.
An adviser or fund management group who offers
services at 1% is going to get more than a quarter of
your contributions over 25 years.
Unless you really do require specialist help, you may
be paying charges for nothing.
7. Tax
Tax can be complex but the basics are very simple. UK
tax generally leaves your wealth untouched during your
lifetime, but tax is levied on the income derived from
that wealth.
Realised gains in wealth are taxed under capital gains
tax. This is levied at your marginal income tax rate
on gains in excess of the annual exemption limit of £8,500
(2005/06).
CGT does not apply to gains made within your pension,
so a Self Invested Personal Pension is the ideal place
to put assets that you hope will increase in value.
Under rules which come in next April, a much wider
range of assets including both residential and
commercial property can be sheltered in SIPPs.
CGT does not apply to gilt-edged stock, nor premium
bonds, which makes them particularly useful additions
to a wealth-preserving portfolio.
If you want tax-free income and total freedom from
risk, the easiest place to look is National Savings
and Investments, which offers premium bonds and both
fixed and inflation-linked savings certificates.
Conclusion
Inevitably, this piece is only a starting point on
wealth preservation. However, getting the planning
ball rolling is half the battle.
If you listen to advisers and lawyers, you would think
that wealth preservation is really just about dealing
with tax. That is very far from the case. The
important thing is actually thinking about your
objectives and risk. The rest will flow from that.
By Nick Louth, MSN Money Special Correspondent
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