Thursday, August 28, 2008

10 Things Millionaires Won't Tell You

Thursday, August 28, 2008
1. "You may think I'm rich, but I don't."
A million dollars may sound like a fortune to most people, and folks with that much cash can't complain — they're richer than 90 percent of U.S. households and earn $366,000 a year, on average, putting them in the top 1 percent of taxpayers. But the club isn't so exclusive anymore. Some 10 million households have a net worth above $1 million, excluding home equity, almost double the number in 2002. Moreover, a recent survey by Fidelity found just 8 percent of millionaires think they're "very" or "extremely" wealthy, while 19 percent don't feel rich at all. "They're worried about health care, retirement and how they'll sustain their lifestyle," says Gail Graham, a wealth-management executive at Fidelity.
Indeed, many millionaires still don't have enough for exclusive luxuries, like membership at an elite golf club, which can top $300,000 a year. While $1 million was a tidy sum three decades ago, you'd need $3.6 million for the same purchasing power today. And half of all millionaires have a net worth of $2.5 million or less, according to research firm TNS. So what does it take to feel truly rich? The magic number is $23 million, according to Fidelity.
-hmmm...its seems one million is not enough to be a millionaire these days

2. "I shop at Wal-Mart..."
They may not buy the 99-cent paper towels, but millionaires know what it is to be frugal. About 80 percent say they spend with a middle-class mind-set, according to a 2007 survey of high-net-worth individuals, published by American Express and the Harrison Group. That means buying luxury items on sale, hunting for bargains — even clipping coupons.
Don Crane, a small-business owner in Santa Rosa, Calif., certainly sees the value of everyday saving. "We can afford just about anything," he says, adding that his net worth is over $1 million. But he and his wife both grew up on farms in the Midwest — where nothing was wasted — and his wife clips coupons to this day. In fact, most millionaires come from middle-class households, and roughly 70 percent have been wealthy for less than 15 years, according to the AmEx/Harrison survey. That said, there are plenty of millionaires who never check a price tag. "I've always wanted to live above my means because it inspired me to work harder," says Robert Kiyosaki, author of the 1997 best seller Rich Dad, Poor Dad. An entrepreneur worth millions, Kiyosaki says he doesn't even know what his house would go for today.
-even millionaires are frugal with their spending...why can we non millionaire follow suit??i mean we can buy luxury things but look at our money in the saving account lah...

3. "...but I didn't get rich by skimping on lattes."
So how do you join the millionaires' club? You could buy stocks or real estate, play the slots in Vegas — or take the most common path: running your own business. That's how half of all millionaires made their money, according to the AmEx/Harrison survey. About a third had a professional practice or worked in the corporate world; only 3 percent inherited their wealth.
Regardless of how they built their nest egg, virtually all millionaires "make judicious use of debt," says Russ Alan Prince, coauthor of "The Middle-Class Millionaire." They'll take out loans to build their business, avoid high-interest credit card debt and leverage their home equity to finance purchases if their cash flow doesn't cut it. Nor is their wealth tied up in their homes. Home equity represents just 11 percent of millionaires' total assets, according to TNS. "People who are serious about building wealth always want to have a mortgage," says Jim Bell, president of Bell Investment Advisors. His home is probably worth $1.5 million, he adds, but he owes $900,000 on it. "I'm in no hurry to pay it off," he says. "It's one of the few tax deductions
-the paragraph speak for itself...hehehe

4. "I have a concierge for everything."
That hot restaurant may be booked for months — at least when Joe Nobody calls to make reservations. But many top eateries set aside tables for celebrities and A-list clientele, and that's where the personal concierge comes in. Working for retainers that range anywhere from $25 an hour to six figures a year, these modern-day butlers have the inside track on chic restaurants, spa reservations, even an early tee time at the golf club. And good concierges will scour the planet for whatever their clients want — whether it's holy water blessed personally by the Pope, rare Mexican tequila or artisanal sausages found only in northern Spain. "For some people, the cost doesn't matter," says Yamileth Delgado, who runs Marquise Concierge and who once found those sausages for a client — 40 pounds of chorizo that went for $1,000.
Concierge services now extend to medical attention as well. At the high end: For roughly $2,000 to $4,000 a month, clients can get 24-hour access to a primary-care physician who makes house calls and can facilitate admission to a hospital "without long waits in the emergency room," as one New York City service puts it
-well if ur rich u could afford this..it would be cool to have someone taking your order of things that u could not get yourself...

5. "You don't get rich by being nice."
John D. Rockefeller threatened rivals with bankruptcy if they didn't sell out to his company, Standard Oil. Bill Gates was ruthless in building Microsoft into the world's largest software firm (remember Netscape?). Indeed, many millionaires privately admit they're "bastards in business," says Prince. "They aren't nice guys." Of course, the wealthy don't exactly look in the mirror and see Gordon Gekko either. Most millionaires share the values of their moderate-income parents, says Lewis Schiff, a private wealth consultant and Prince's coauthor: "Spending time with family really matters to them." Just 12 percent say that what they want most to be remembered for is their legacy in business, according to the AmEx/Harrison study.
Millionaires are also seemingly undaunted by failure. Crane, for example, now runs a successful company that screens tenants for landlords. But his first business venture, a real estate partnership, went bankrupt, costing him $20,000 — more than his house was worth at the time. "It was the most depressing time in my life, but it was the best lesson I ever learned," he says.
- this paragraph say that u need to be aggressive in business...not dormant such as lay and wait until people come to you...u must come to the people and pull them to you...but only in business..not in real life..any religion requires its devotees to be nice to one another

6. "Taxes are for little people."
Most millionaires do pay taxes. In fact, the top 1 percent of earners paid nearly 40 percent of federal income taxes in 2005 — a whopping $368 billion — according to the Internal Revenue Service. That said, the wealthy tend to derive a higher portion of their income from dividends and capital gains, which are taxed at lower rates than wages (15 percent for long-term capital gains versus 25 percent for middle-class wages). Also, high-income earners pay Social Security tax only on their first $97,500 of income.
But the big savings come from owning a business and deducting everything related to it. Landlords can also depreciate their commercial properties and expenses like mortgage interest. And that's without doing any creative accounting. Then there are the tax shelters, trusts and other mechanisms the superrich use to shield their wealth. An estimated 2 million Americans have unreported accounts offshore, and income from foreign tax shelters costs the U.S. $20 billion to $40 billion a year, according to the IRS. Indeed, "an increasing number of people want to establish an offshore fund," says Vernon Jacobs, a certified public accountant in Kansas who specializes in legal foreign accounts.
-i dont know about our country taxes procedures but i do know that if u wanna start a business..u are given a certain period of time and until u obtain a certain amount of profit in which u do not have to pay corporate taxes..so a good way to avoid taxes...start a business

7. "I was a B student."
Mom was right when she said good grades were the key to success — just not necessarily a big bank account. According to the book "The Millionaire Mind," the median college grade point average for millionaires is 2.9, and the average SAT score is 1190 — hardly Harvard material. In fact, 59 percent of millionaires attended a state college or university, according to AmEx/Harrison.
When asked to list the keys to their success, millionaires rank hard work first, followed by education, determination and "treating others with respect." They also say that what they absorbed in class was less important than learning how to study and stay disciplined, says Jim Taylor, vice chairman of the Harrison Group. Granted, 48 percent of millionaires hold an advanced degree, and elite colleges do open doors to careers on Wall Street and in Silicon Valley (not to mention social connections that grease the wheels). But for every Ph.D. millionaire, there are many more who squeaked through school. Kiyosaki, for one, says the only way he survived college calculus was by "sitting near" the smart kids in class — "we cheated like crazy," he says
- u see..u can flunk your test and still be a millionaire...how??read the paragraph.. :)

8. "Like my Ferrari? It's a rental."
Why spend $3,000 on a Versace bag that'll be out of style as soon as next season when you can rent it for $175 a month? For that matter, why blow $250,000 on a Ferrari when for $25,000 it can be yours for a few weekends a year? Clubs that offer "fractional ownership" of jets have been popular for some time, and now the concept has extended to other high-end luxuries like exotic cars and fine art. How hot is the trend? More than 50 percent of millionaires say they plan to rent luxury goods within the next 12 months, according to a survey by Prince & Associates. Handbags topped the list, followed by cars, jewelry, watches and art. Online companies like Bag Borrow or Steal, for example, cater to customers who always want new designer accessories and jewelry, for prices starting at $15 a week.
For Suzanne Garner, a millionaire software engineer in Santa Clara, Calif., owning a $100,000 car didn't make financial sense (she drives a Mazda Miata). Instead, Garner pays up to $30,000 in annual membership fees to Club Sportiva, a fractional-ownership car club in San Francisco that lets her take out Ferraris, Lamborghinis and other exotic vehicles on weekends. "I'm all about the car," she says. And so are other people, it seems. While stopped at a light in a Ferrari recently, Garner received a marriage proposal from a guy in a pickup truck. (She declined the offer.)
-owh...we dont have this..maybe we should...start a good renting empire...i can see it now..thousand vips,vvips and artists will line at my stores...hahaha

9. "Turns out money can buy happiness."
It may not be comforting to folks who aren't minting cash, but the rich really are different. "There's no group in America that's happier than the wealthy," says Taylor, of the Harrison Group. Roughly 70 percent of millionaires say that money"created" more happiness for them,he notes. Higher income also correlates with higher ratings in life satisfaction, according to a new study by economists at the Wharton School of Business. But it's not necessarily the Bentley or Manolo Blahniks that lead to bliss. "It's the freedom that money buys," says Betsey Stevenson, coauthor of the Wharton study.
Concomitantly, rates of depression are lower among the wealthy, according to the Wharton study, and the rich tend to have better health than the rest of the population, says James Smith, senior labor economist at the Rand Corporation. (In fact, health and happiness are as closely correlated as wealth and happiness, Smith says.) The wealthy even seem to smile and laugh more often, according to the Wharton study, to say nothing of getting treated with more respect and eating better food. "People experience their day very differently when they have a lot of money," Stevenson says.
-really...i thought money cant buy u happiness...weird..well i still think i doesnt..what do u guys think??..

10. "You worry about the Joneses — I worry about keeping up with the Trumps."
Wealth may go a long way toward creating happiness, but the middle-class rich still can't afford the life of the billionaire next door — the guy who writes charity checks for $100,000 and retreats to his own private island. "What makes people happy isn't how much they're making," says Glenn Firebaugh, a sociologist at Pennsylvania State University. "It's how much they're making relative to their peers."
Indeed, for all their riches, some 40 percent of millionaires fear that their standard of living will decline in retirement and that their money will run out before they die, according to Fidelity. Of course, it may not help if their lifestyle is so lavish that they're barely squeaking by on $400,000 a year. "You can always be happier with more money," says Stevenson. "There's no satiation point." But that's the trouble with keeping up with the Trumps. "Millionaires are always looking up," says Schiff, "and think it's better up there."
-there u have it...money cant buy you happiness...u always be jealous of other millionaires and what about billionaires??they are way richer that millionaires...so the key is to be content....

Monday, August 18, 2008

owh man...not the drama again...why me???

Monday, August 18, 2008
aduh...kenapa dh nk dekat grad ni ada je masalah...skrg ni kwn baik sy yg sy kenal sejak 1 setengah tahun dulu buat hal...aduh...dahlah sibuk dgn test...test..test...ingatkan berkwn ni bolehlah tolong kita mengurangkan rasa tertekan tu tapi lain pulak jadinya..xde masa lah dgn semua ni...byk assignment nk buat..test pastu presentation...perlu ke berdrama ni?dahlah buang masa sy...zaman varsity ni kita kena enjoy...masa blaja kita blaja..masa fun kita have fun..kalau nk berdrama jual kt tv...jgn jual kt sy...kalau x laku tu maknanya org x suka..tolonglah..kita semua dh besar..ada akal..boleh fikirlah...jgnlah susahkan org lain..nk buat perangai tu buat kat parent korg...jgn buat kt kwn..kwn ni dh banyak masalah nk dirisaukan..x perlu nk tambah lg..kita student ni nk fikir pasal blaja..pastu u apa nk masuk lepas grad...subject apa...ditambah pulak dgn famili problem mcm mak sy yg sakit...kwn ni sepatutnya menjadi support and resistance(kalau siapa ambik investment course taulah apa bendenye ni...ehehehe)...kwn support kita bila kita dlm kesusahan atau perlukan kata2 perangsang atau nasihat utk berjaya..diaorg jgk menjadi resistance bila kita nk buat bende yg boleh merosakkan diri kita...so kalau korg dlm kesusahan ke...insyaallah kalau sy berupaya nk tolong sy tolong..so fikirlah baik2 k sebelum kita buat sesuatu..fikir pasal org lain kalau kita nk mintak tolong dia..dia susah ke senang ke...sebab dunia ni bkn kita punye..dunia ni tuhan yg punye...tuhan cipta semua manusia xde kelas,harta atau status..semuanya sama..kalau dia nk tarik nikmat dia...dia x tunggu kita senang atau masa yg sesuai bg kita..kalau dia nk tarik dia tarik aja...masa tu kita perlukan kesemua keluarga dan kwn utk menghadapi dugaan tu..jd fikirlah...

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

bkn bersifat perkauman!!!!!!!

Tuesday, August 12, 2008
apa yg aku tulis dlm blog ini bkn bersifat perkauman..tp lebih kepada semangat nk perjuangkan bangsa sendiri..katakanlah uitm nk dibuka kepada bkn bumiputera...kalau mcm tu hapuskan sekolah2 cina dan india di seluruh negara...kalau mereka boleh buat mcm tu kenapa kita tidak boleh...aku ingat lg masa kerajaan nk sentuh pasal sekolah cina dgn india ni...korg semua kata xnk...jgn ganggu sekolah cina dgn india...bla..bla..bla.....so kenapa sekarang korg buat dekat bangsa melayu??uitm hanya utk bumiputera...x cukup ke dgn universiti lain..berlambaklah kt luar sana...kenapa nk kacau uitm je...kalau korg xdpt masuk universiti21 tu masalah korg...kenapa korg x belajar bersungguh-sungguh...cuba kita jaga keamanan negara ni bersama-sama..korg x ingat ke masa jepun jajah dulu...betapa peritnya hidup korg setiap hari..kalau org jepun tu jumpa org cina diaorg akan bunuh kan..so masa tu kita bantu membantu..kenapa sekarang berbeza..cuba kita fikirkan balik...kitaorg dh buka MRSM utk bkn bumiputera tapi korg masih x cukup...nk semua ke???...enough is enough...we all are the citizen of Malaysia..there are more pressing matters to attend to...We should be worried that the war in Iraq will devastate the entire world and cause the oil price to hit sky high or the environmental problems that were predicted years ago...the antartic or south pole is losing mass or in other words melting...if we dont do something about this there will be no world to live in anymore....plss...wake up people...no more fighting among ourselves..we should focus on what is important...we dont want anything from the past to come back again...think about your children futures..

KENAPA DGN ORG MELAYU NI !!!!!!!

kenapa org melayu xnk pertahankan bangsa mereka sendiri...x cukup dgn tu ada yg nk jual bangsa sendiri..hapuskan bangsa sendiri...korg x fikir ke masa moyang kita dulu pertahankan tanah melayu ni...korg x fikir ke...ke korg dh bodoh nk mampus sampai nk fikir pun x boleh...mcm mana pahlawan melayu zaman dahulu sanggup bermati-matian pertahankan tanah ni..kita sewenang-wenangnya nk jual..nk hapuskannya...cuba korg fikir...kalau tanah melayu ni dh xde...org melayu nk pg mana..kakak...adik..emak...bapak..nenek..atuk korg tu nk pg mana...cuba bagi tahu kt aku...kalau org cina mereka boleh balik cina..org india boleh balik india..kita melayu nk pg mana??..Indon..mereka pun xnk kita...pastu ada org melayu yg sokong uitm dibuka kepada bangsa lain...korg yg sokong tu senanglah..duit byk..duit haram je yg dapat(sesetengah tu..x semua)...tp org yg duduk kt pedalaman..luar bandar mcm kt sabah sarawak tu..mcm mana diaorg nk dpt peluang masuk universiti??..diaorg kalah dari segi mempunyai fasiliti yg lengkap utk belajar..jd mcm mana diaorg nk bersaing masuk ke dalam universiti walhal kuota tu dh dipenuhi oleh bkn bumiputera...mereka juga ada komitmen lain nk dibuat...mcm nk jaga keluarga...so kalau diaorg blaja pastu dpt 8A utk SPM (sbb diaorg mana ada subjek yg ditawarkan mcm kt bandar contohnya english literature)..pastu ada bkn bumiputera yg dpt 11A..ditambah dgn org bumiputera yg dapat keputusan lebih baik..jd mcm mana dia nk masuk u..kalau ada uitm..uitm bantu bumiputera sahaja..jadi dia akan dapat masuk uitm..dapat masuk uni..blaja utk bantu keluarga..jadi jgnlah kita korbankan bangsa kita semata-mata utk kepentingan sendiri...sebab telah diberitahu..sekirannya seseorg itu teraniaya..maka doanya akan dimakbulkan tuhan..jadi cuba bayangkan doa berjuta2 bumiputera yg mahukan keadilan..xke parah kalau tuhan makbulkan doa2 itu..jadi perjuangkan bangsa kita...
 
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