Sentences with phrase «investing than tomorrow»

But no matter when you start or how old you are today, today is a better day to start investing than tomorrow.

Not exact matches

So, as Robbins said, even if you're afraid that the market will crash tomorrow, you're still better off investing your money rather than keeping it in savings account where it will accrue a minuscule amount of interest.
Rather than focusing on the turbulence, wondering whether you need to do something now or wondering what the market will do tomorrow, it makes more sense to focus on developing and maintaining a sound investing plan.
Distrust in the stock market grew to new heights as people decided to spend their money on things and experiences rather than invest for tomorrow.
Five years is more tomorrows than some people have to invest in a writing dream.
Rather than focusing on the turbulence, wondering whether you need to do something now or wondering what the market will do tomorrow, it makes more sense to focus on developing and maintaining a sound investing plan.
Whether you have $ 100, $ 1,000 or $ 1,000,000 to invest, the overall goal is the same: you're most likely investing to have more money tomorrow than what you had today.
My retirement date is further than 10 years out, so if the stock market crashed tomorrow (and the companies I was invested in remained healthy), then I would be super happy because I have a chance to buy the stocks cheaply.
«Obviously as the Green Party [MLA], I'd prefer to keep it in the ground as much as possible and start to invest sooner than later into the low - carbon economy of tomorrow, but I'm pragmatic and I recognize at some point one may need to develop a compromise and a compromise solution is one that would actually give jobs in B.C.»
«Obviously as the Green Party [MLA], I'd prefer to keep it in the ground as much as possible and start to invest sooner than later into the low - carbon economy of tomorrow, but I'm pragmatic and I recognize at some point one may need to develop a compromise and a compromise solution is one that would actually give jobs in B.C.» [more]
I'm never very stirred — or shaken — by this sort of institute report, but this time there's real merit in the thing, I think: rather than scrape the rust off the Victorian cogs and shafts, we should invest in what we now know will be tomorrow's «normal» technology and skill sets.
«But the outlook (in 2009) was tomorrow will be better than today, and we ought to be investing in land — aggressively.»
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