Investing For Simple People #1, Mutual Funds And Personal Finance

This is the third and the last post for the first edition of this carnival, the other posts were Investing, Miscellaneous And Education.

Mutual Funds

Bryan Moore presents Utilizing “Hedge Fund” Mutual Funds to Generate Consistent Returns, saying, “The rules regarding hedge fund investing are very strict and they restrict investors with a small asset base from participating in the lucrative returns that come with the asset class. However, there are mutual funds currently employing strategies typically seen in hedge funds. This blog post tests the performance of this strategy over a 4 1/2 time frame.”

Personal Finance

Tushar Mathur gives an advice to young people in Financial Planner: Do I Need One?

Christopher J. Brunner shares information on a new and improved way for the sole-proprietor business owner to save for retirement in Retirement for the Sole-Proprietor

Silicon Valley Blogger rambles about what would he do with $50,000 dropped from the sky on him in Receive A Windfall and Treat It Right.

WBL touches a very good point about the same topic as Rich Dad was talking about - are you really rich with million dollars in annual salary, or you are poor. Read Too Rich To Save? to find out.

Larry Russell presents The kind of financial adviser you need - A Tip from The Skilled Investor, saying, “Good or bad, financial advisers are expensive. If you need a financial advisor’s help and you carefully select a good financial adviser, the value of the personal finance and investment advice that you receive might easily repay the adviser cost. However, bad financial advisers can cost you dearly, though both high financial expenses and poor investment strategies. How can you tell the difference between a good and bad adviser?”

Zenofeller takes on Steve Pavlina(who writes a lot about Personal Development and Finance) in The Drowned Faithful.

Bill presents his point of view on How To SAVE A Million Dollars by following a plan and be persistent.

Aaron Wakling shows what you should know about credit cards and how evil they are in A Real Eye Opener - Learn The Facts About Your Credit Card!

Allen Taylor gives you 3 rules to be independent in his Steps to Financial Independence.

Tim Ramsey gives you some tricks in dodging your bad credit score, read How to Obtain Low Card Interest with Bad Credit.

Eric Stanley encourages those who has doubts in themselves on the road to their success in Getting Money to Finance Your Purpose in Life.

David Pitlyuk gives his thoughts about John Chow’s misty money making schema in Turn $1 Into $100 In 3 Months. I would not trust Citibank either…

That concludes this edition. Submit your blog article to the next edition of Investing For Simple People using our carnival submission form.

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This entry was posted on Sunday, June 17th, 2007 and is filed under Carnival. 2,070 Views. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 Responses to “Investing For Simple People #1, Mutual Funds And Personal Finance”

  1. Sephyroth says:

    Some very interesting ideas you have here. However, that Citibank offer ended on the 31st of May. The only thing I’d be concerned about with it is that they will report the earnings to the IRS as Interest earnings. I would have signed up for the account (making sure of course to not allow them to share my information with others). It was a great offer and hopefully they’ll do it again.

    I wanted to let you know about some of the cool things going on over at the US Blogs Community at Bumpzee. There is an RSS Feed which will give you snippets of every post in the community, both on blogs and in the community itself. Also, you can get a US Blogs button and a list of links to all the blogs in the community. As of now, we’re up to 40 blogs, and it would be awesome if we could get the number doubled by the end of the month. It might seem to be daunting, but we’ve gone from none to 40 in the space of three weeks, so it’s definitely possible. Be sure to tell all your blogging friends here in the States about it :)

    Sephyroth
    http://sephyroth.blogspot.com

  2. Alex says:

    Thank you, Sephyroth for the input.
    I think David Pitlyuk submitted the article about the Citibank offer without checking all the details :) I was not aware of the offer deadline.

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