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Check your Net Worth, Profiling for your Child Education Plan, Home Plan and even Retirement Plan. Its free. I will come out with FINANCIAL REPORT and you will evaluate yourself.
What Warren Buffet does in this slow market activity .................... shoppingggggggggggggggg
Understand How Unit Trust Consultant can lower down your risk in investing with Unit Trust. Go to Learning Center and look for Asset Allocation and Dollar Cost Averaging. Proud to say, the article is in Bahasa Melayu. The later I will write about Switching technic
Read the article from Warren Buffet below or click here for the article
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Welcome to My Pro Invest
This website aims to promote unit trust as a way of accumulating wealth in the medium to long term investment. This website will concentrate solely in the Syariah Based Unit Trust from the number 1 unit trust company in Malaysia.
This website will give information on how you can become a smart investor to the various products that Malaysia's No. 1 Unit Trust Company has to offer. Please browse through every tabs of this websites to find information about the products and how you can start to invest.
On becoming the unit trust consultant, the team from My Pro Invest will pay close attention to the career development of the unit trust consultant by providing constant guideline, coaching and training, so that you can become a great unit trust consultant, who is proficient in managing investors' asset portfolios.
I humbly call everyone who is interested to get on board with me to invest and accumulate wealth with Unit Trust and better still to become a Unit Trust Consultant . Take this opportunity to excel as a team member an as individual to earn some decent income.
For details to make investment and to become unit trust consultant, please call me at H/P: 019 325 6161 or email me at Nor Razi.
By Warren E. Buffett
The financial world is a mess, both in the United States and abroad. Its problems,moreover, have been leaking into the general economy, and the leaks are now turning into a gusher. In the near term, unemployment will rise, business activity will falter and headlines will continue to be scary.
So ... I've been buying American stocks. This is my personal account I'm talking about, in which I previously owned nothing but United States government bonds. (This description leaves aside my Berkshire Hathaway holdings, which are all committed to philanthropy.) If prices keep looking attractive, my non-Berkshire net worth will soon be 100 percent in United States equities.
Why?
A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful. And most certainly, fear is now widespread,gripping even seasoned investors. To be sure, investors are right to be wary of highly leveraged entities or businesses in weak competitive positions. But fears regarding the long-term prosperity of the nation's many sound companies make no sense. These businesses will indeed suffer earnings hiccups, as they always have. But most major companies will be setting new profit records 5, 10and 20 years from now.
Let me be clear on one point: I can't predict the short-term movements of the stock market. I haven't the faintest idea as to whether stocks will be higher or lower a month — or a year — from now. What is likely, however, is that the market will move higher, perhaps substantially so, well before either sentiment or the economy turns up. So if you wait for the robins, spring will be over.
A little history here: During the Depression, the Dow hit its low, 41, on July 8, 1932.Economic conditions, though, kept deteriorating until Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in March 1933. By that time, the market had already advanced 30percent. Or think back to the early days of World War II, when things were going badly for the United States in Europe and the Pacific. The market hit bottom in April1942, well before Allied fortunes turned. Again, in the early 1980s, the time to buy stocks was when inflation raged and the economy was in the tank. In short, bad news is an investor's best friend. It lets you buy a slice of America's future at a marked-down price.
Over the long term, the stock market news will be good. In the 20th century,the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts;the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497.
You might think it would have been impossible for an investor to lose money during a century marked by such an extraordinary gain. But some investors did.The hapless ones bought stocks only when they felt comfort in doing so and then proceeded to sell when the headlines made them queasy.
Today people who hold cash equivalents feel comfortable. They shouldn't. They have opted for a terrible long-term asset, one that pays virtually nothing and is certain to depreciate in value. Indeed, the policies that government will follow in its efforts to alleviate the current crisis will probably prove inflationary and therefore accelerate declines in the real value of cash accounts. |
Equities will almost certainly outperform cash over the next decade, probably by a substantial degree. Those investors who cling now to cash are betting they can efficiently time their move away from it later. In waiting for the comfort of good news, they are ignoring Wayne Gretzky's advice: "I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been."
I don't like to opine on the stock market, and again I emphasize that I have no idea what the market will do in the short term. Nevertheless, I'll follow the lead of a restaurant that opened in an empty bank building and then advertised:"Put your mouth where your money was." Today my money and my mouth both say equities.
So what are we waiting for? Lets buy equity.

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This
issue carries the second part of a continuing series on whether riba is
a real world economic issue. It contains some of the findings of a
study which indicate, among others, that commercial banks’ riba income
is strongly correlated (95.9%) with total yearly inflation — that one
unit of riba income of commercial banks causes a 35-basis-point
increase in inflation. This is solely because of the riba element and
not because of any gap between demand and supply for any or all goods
and services in the economy. Report author Mohammad Aamir, an
investment banker as well as a cost and management accountant, contends
that this reveals the nature of riba as a “wealth destroying agent”.
This shows up a fundamental difference between conventional and
Islamic finance — making money from money versus making money work. The
ongoing financial and economic crisis ought to be regarded as an
opportunity to reset the way things work. What the crisis has amply
demonstrated is that the conventional financial sector has become too
far removed from the real economy. Islamic finance has a sound general
practice: In making an investment, don’t consider only asset prices.
Focus on the business proposition and the people who will do it.
In the face of a rapidly shrinking world trade, the US Senate did
right this week by voting to soften a controversial “Buy American”
clause in a US$800 billion economic recovery package, after warnings it
could spark a trade war. The clause had sought to ensure that only US
iron, steel and manufactured goods are used in projects funded by the
bill. The climb-down followed warnings from the European Union and
Canada that the stimulus bill could trigger protectionism. The White
House has said it supports giving preference to domestic manufacturers
in public works programs but only if this does not violate existing
trade agreements.
The message that emerges is: “Let’s get real.” It’s the real world’s
economy and financial sector that are in trouble. Measures to alleviate
the situation should therefore focus on what’s happening on the ground.
Credit is Latin for trust and confidence. Those in the financial sector
should keep this in mind. After all, in banking, reputation is
everything.
With the Bank of England widely expected to reduce UK interest rates
to 1% from the current 1.5%, it appears that the major developed
countries are trending toward a zero interest rate regime, as is being
practiced by not only Islamic finance but also by the Bank of Japan. It
has been reported that scrapping interest rates is gaining widespread
appeal. Mohammad Aamir’s study may have been truly worthwhile.
PLAN WELL, RETIRE WEALTHY
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