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Old 07.24.2013, 02:29 AM   #107
dead_battery
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Join Date: Aug 2011
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dead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's assesdead_battery kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by !@#$%!
an index fund is different, it simply tracks the stock market or a particular index (eg the dow). the thing is to find one with low fees (e.g, in america, vanguard) because the buying and selling have a cost and for people who trade frequently it's what kills earnings.

a better explanation can be found here:
http://www.fool.com/60second/indexfund.htm

but dividends are another path to go. there is a guy called jakob fiskar who managed to "retire" from his mad scientist job (he was a physicist) in 7 years... he wrote a little crazy tract on "early retirement extreme" where he explains how to live with little and be financially independent quickly--- he did it with dividend stocks.

now this isn't for the faint of heart and it fits more the ascetic approach to life but he had a forum here:

http://earlyretirementextreme.com/

and his book can be found here:

https://www.createspace.com/3457832

very smart guy, very DIY, has since gone back to work in the financial sector as a mathematician, but if you figure out his method you could be free from serfdom/potential serfdom very quickly. i'm not interested in "retirement" per se (i do what i like and i have no master), but having the flexibility to have no financial hurdles would be awesome.

anyway, enjoy.

thanks man, another addition to my expanding armoury of anti homelessness weapons.
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