
Your Stronger Financial Future: The Eight Essential Strategies for Making Profitable Investments
Mike Egan(Author)
McGraw-Hill Professional (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 16. September 2011
Book
Hardback
192 pages
978-0-07-177299-0 (ISBN)
Description
Eight simple strategies for getting your retirement portfolio back in shape
Is Social Security about to collapse? (No.) Is Wall Street totally corrupt? (Nope.) Did the government bailouts benefit only "insiders"? (Absolutely not.) Is the American Dream dead? (Not on your life.)
Myths, misconceptions, and misinformation perpetuated by politicians, the media, and other self-interested parties can have a devastating effect on your retirement portfolio. After all, if you're working with the wrong information, how can you make the right investing decisions?
Mike Egan, a financial advisor for both individuals and corporations, has worked on Wall Street for more than 20 years. He handles millions of dollars at a time. He knows how it all works-and he's here to tell you that a lot of what you hear just isn't true.
In Your Stronger Financial Future, Egan busts the most powerful myths that are affecting your retirement plans and provides simple but highly effective strategies you can use to start turning your portfolio around today. Egan's eight retirement-investing maxims include:
Count on Social Security-but make it only part of your overall planIdentify the inflation-adjusted amount you need at retirementGet a licensed financial advisor who really understands Wall StreetMaintain your own personal "bailout fund"Build savings rather than accrue debtUse annuities to account for longevity and healthcare
Two things are standing in the way of you and your dream retirement: misconceptions and presumption. Transcending the negative psychology that misdirects your investing performance is easy-you just need the right information and new strategies to replace the old ones. Your Stronger Financial Future delivers both.
Sometimes changing course midstream is a good thing. Now is the time to reassess your outlook, rethink your finances, and reposition yourself for a stronger financial future.
Is Social Security about to collapse? (No.) Is Wall Street totally corrupt? (Nope.) Did the government bailouts benefit only "insiders"? (Absolutely not.) Is the American Dream dead? (Not on your life.)
Myths, misconceptions, and misinformation perpetuated by politicians, the media, and other self-interested parties can have a devastating effect on your retirement portfolio. After all, if you're working with the wrong information, how can you make the right investing decisions?
Mike Egan, a financial advisor for both individuals and corporations, has worked on Wall Street for more than 20 years. He handles millions of dollars at a time. He knows how it all works-and he's here to tell you that a lot of what you hear just isn't true.
In Your Stronger Financial Future, Egan busts the most powerful myths that are affecting your retirement plans and provides simple but highly effective strategies you can use to start turning your portfolio around today. Egan's eight retirement-investing maxims include:
Count on Social Security-but make it only part of your overall planIdentify the inflation-adjusted amount you need at retirementGet a licensed financial advisor who really understands Wall StreetMaintain your own personal "bailout fund"Build savings rather than accrue debtUse annuities to account for longevity and healthcare
Two things are standing in the way of you and your dream retirement: misconceptions and presumption. Transcending the negative psychology that misdirects your investing performance is easy-you just need the right information and new strategies to replace the old ones. Your Stronger Financial Future delivers both.
Sometimes changing course midstream is a good thing. Now is the time to reassess your outlook, rethink your finances, and reposition yourself for a stronger financial future.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
0 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 162 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
435 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-07-177299-0 (9780071772990)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Mike Egan
Your Stronger Financial Future: The Eight Essential Strategies for Making Profitable Investments
E-Book
08/2011
1st Edition
McGraw-Hill Education
€46.89
Available for download
Person
Mike Egan, CFP, CIMA, is a financial advisor who began his career as a derivatives marketer at Lehman Brothers, structuring and executing swap and derivative transactions totaling more than $8 billion for Fortune 20 companies. Egan founded the Corporate and Executive Services Group at Legg Mason Wood Walker, Inc., in Baltimore. Read more at MacroMike.com.
Content
Foreword
Introduction
Myth #1: You can coast into retirement
Myth #2: Social Security is on the brink of collapse
Myth #3: The Fed skims 5 percent from our currency, causing in?ation, which ruins your savings
Myth #4: Wall Street is corrupt. Avoid it
Myth #5: Government bailouts are for the insiders, not the people
Myth #6: Leverage is the key to prosperity
Myth #7: Sinister world powers seek to lessen the world's population
Myth #8: The American Dream is to kick back and never work again
Afterword
Notes and Sources
Introduction
Myth #1: You can coast into retirement
Myth #2: Social Security is on the brink of collapse
Myth #3: The Fed skims 5 percent from our currency, causing in?ation, which ruins your savings
Myth #4: Wall Street is corrupt. Avoid it
Myth #5: Government bailouts are for the insiders, not the people
Myth #6: Leverage is the key to prosperity
Myth #7: Sinister world powers seek to lessen the world's population
Myth #8: The American Dream is to kick back and never work again
Afterword
Notes and Sources