Author: | Thomas H. Kee | ISBN: | 9780470553879 |
Publisher: | Wiley | Publication: | October 6, 2009 |
Imprint: | Wiley | Language: | English |
Author: | Thomas H. Kee |
ISBN: | 9780470553879 |
Publisher: | Wiley |
Publication: | October 6, 2009 |
Imprint: | Wiley |
Language: | English |
An eye-opening look at how investors can take control of their financial life
Buy and Hold Is Dead provides actionable strategies and disciplines, which can be used to earn positive results in any market environment. Money managers rarely outperform the stock market over time, and this has become a sticking point for many people as our uneven economic landscape continues to unfold. This timely guide is designed around a step-by-step educational process in which traders and investors lean how they can protect their wealth and make money regardless of market direction. The goal of Buy and Hold Is Dead is twofold: to dispel old-school investment techniques and to show you how to maximize your returns without sacrificing time or lifestyle and without the use of a money manager.
Losing less is never a winning strategy, and this book skillfully addresses why it should not be considered a positive result despite relative market performance.
An eye-opening look at how investors can take control of their financial life
Buy and Hold Is Dead provides actionable strategies and disciplines, which can be used to earn positive results in any market environment. Money managers rarely outperform the stock market over time, and this has become a sticking point for many people as our uneven economic landscape continues to unfold. This timely guide is designed around a step-by-step educational process in which traders and investors lean how they can protect their wealth and make money regardless of market direction. The goal of Buy and Hold Is Dead is twofold: to dispel old-school investment techniques and to show you how to maximize your returns without sacrificing time or lifestyle and without the use of a money manager.
Losing less is never a winning strategy, and this book skillfully addresses why it should not be considered a positive result despite relative market performance.