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Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Tue Jul 10, 2012 11:58 am
by craigr
I put up a podcast talking a bit about risk from a start-up entrepreneur perspective:
https://web.archive.org/web/20160324133 ... o-podcast/
Feedback welcome...
Re: Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Tue Jul 10, 2012 8:44 pm
by ozzy
Good talk Craig, thanks!
Re: Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2012 12:51 pm
by dualstow
I don't know if it's your end or mine, but the audio sounds better this time around.
Re: Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Sat Jul 14, 2012 11:39 am
by craigr
dualstow wrote:
I don't know if it's your end or mine, but the audio sounds better this time around.
I don't know what changed. Maybe I changed some mic setting?
Re: Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Wed Jul 18, 2012 12:23 pm
by Lone Wolf
This was a great talk. I'm glad that I finally got a chance to listen to it. Now
that's a proper Variable Portfolio.
When you think about it, many investors take a very safe career path so that they can save. Unfortunately, they then proceed to gamble it some risky investment strategy.
In other words, a very conservative career is often used to enable a very risky investment life. But like you said, why not do it the other way around? Why not allow a very conservative investment life to enable greater freedom and flexibility in your career?
Re: Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Wed Jul 18, 2012 12:32 pm
by craigr
Lone Wolf wrote:
This was a great talk. I'm glad that I finally got a chance to listen to it. Now
that's a proper Variable Portfolio.
When you think about it, many investors take a very safe career path so that they can save. Unfortunately, they then proceed to gamble it some risky investment strategy.
In other words, a very conservative career is often used to enable a very risky investment life. But like you said, why not do it the other way around? Why not allow a very conservative investment life to enable greater freedom and flexibility in your career?
I understand too that some people may not be able to do risky things in their career. For this reason I fall back onto one of Harry Browne's rules that you can't replace your wealth. I really hate seeing advice that tells investors to take huge gambles with their life savings. I've known people get really pummeled following that advice. I think anyone looking to gamble money should first consider taking that gamble on themselves before giving their hard earned money to others to gamble for them. IMO.
Yes, I have a different perspective on these things than others. I just think many investors convince themselves to take risks in many wrong places when the best investment they have is in their own abilities and ideas!
Re: Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Wed Jul 18, 2012 9:33 pm
by sophie
I just think many investors convince themselves to take risks in many wrong places when the best investment they have is in their own abilities and ideas!
Thank you Craig, for a wonderful podcast. The idea of becoming "financially independent" is closely related to this, although I haven't heard it stated so succinctly. It would certainly be easier to take risks in your career if you didn't have to live in fear of job (and income) loss.
Re: Podcast: Investing and Risk
Posted: Thu Jul 19, 2012 3:11 am
by Jake
Great podcast, I really enjoyed it. I really appreciated the message of betting on yourself and your career as wealth generation and then treating investment as a way of keeping what you've made, with modest appreciation but low risk. There is a lot of support for the wisdom of this approach in Thomas Stanley's surveys of people who became millionaires within one generation. I'm reading his book "The Millionaire Mind" at the moment. He doesn't go into specifics of their portfolio allocation, but the basic message is that most of the people he surveyed who became millionaires took risks on their own entrepreneurship to generate wealth and then were conservative investors.