Smart writers (indie publishers) look at a book lasting far past their death and think of each story,
each book as an investment in the future.
Not exact matches
Case
in point: Following the Enron blow - up, the Financial Accounting Standards Board banned an accounting practice that Enron had used to
book expected
future profits
as earnings, immediately, at very the moment it made an
investment.
As I have discussed
in two
book chapters, Absolute Returns
in Commodity (Natural Resource)
Futures Investments in Hedge Fund &
Investment Management (Edited by Izzy Nelken) and also
in The Long and Short of Commodity
Futures Index Investing
in Intelligent Commodity Investing, there are two major opportunities to capture returns
in commodities, which are cyclical opportunities and systematic opportunities.
As mentioned
in the comments of a prior post, I have discussed
in two
book chapters, Absolute Returns
in Commodity (Natural Resource)
Futures Investments in Hedge Fund &
Investment Management (Edited by Izzy Nelken) and also
in The Long and Short of Commodity
Futures Index Investing
in Intelligent Commodity Investing (Edited by Hilary Till and Joseph Eagleye,) there are two major opportunities to capture returns
in commodities, which are cyclical opportunities and systematic opportunities.
As for Suze Orman,
in her
book The Money Class: How to Stand
in Your Truth and Create the
Future You Deserve (2012), the top four items on her quick list of
investments to avoid (p. 276) are: