Showing posts with label oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Get rich through debt, but study it: Kiyosaki

DON'T ask Robert Kiyosaki for tips on how to get rich. He'll just tell you to "get smart".

"The last guy who asked for a tip invested in Facebook," he said, referring to the social networking site's poor showing on the stock exchange.

Rather, the author of personal finance best-seller Rich Dad Poor Dad wants people to get smart about debt.

"People are so used to working hard for dollars. But the rich become rich through debt," the 65-year-old told more than 300 attendees at a book signing organised by the National Library Board last Thursday. "It's a fundamental change of thought."

The controversial writer encourages people to use debt to finance the purchase of assets, which he defines as things that generate cashflow. These include businesses and rental properties.

Assets can also be as simple as a self-written e-book on how to write e-books, his wife and fellow author, Kim Kiyosaki, said. "My friend did that and she makes about US$300 a month on royalties - it's small, but she doesn't have to do anything else for the money to keep coming."

The underlying principle of Mr Kiyosaki's 22 books is this: be an entrepreneur, not an employee.
Not only do assets generate perpetual income for you, but their ownership also gives many an entrepreneur tax breaks in the United States, he said.

"As a business owner with more than 25,000 employees, every state would give me a tax break for moving there," Mr Kiyosaki told BT in a phone interview. "And the reason they give me tax breaks is because they tax my employees."

This is why he rails against the American education system - it trains students to be employees, which will always leave them poor, he told audiences.

Determined to bypass what he thinks is wrong, "brainwashing" advice in American schools, Mr Kiyosaki is rolling out his own financial education system with his books, and soon, mobile platforms like the iPhone.

"I teach, even though it's a poor dad's kind of job," he said, referring to the book that made him a household name. "That's because I'm very concerned - worried really."

Mr Kiyosaki is especially cautious about a global financial crash, which he predicts will happen in 2016.

"Israel will bomb Iran before 2014, and oil prices will skyrocket to US$300 to US$400 a barrel. The world economy will collapse because it can't sustain that," he told BT.

He also thinks America risks going into hyper-inflation, if the Federal Reserve continues to print more dollars to lower interest rates and encourage spending in a declining domestic market.

But as worried as he is, Mr Kiyosaki believes he can come out of any crisis relatively unscathed because of his choice of investments.

Referring to his prophecy about imminent war and high oil prices, Mr Kiyosaki said: "As much as I hope such a crisis doesn't happen, I'll end up a rich man, anyway."

This is because he owns around 100 oil wells and oil drilling operations around the US.

"I'm in oil production - I'll be needed because governments need me to provide oil and jobs. You need me so you can fly planes," he explained, adding that he does not invest in oil company shares like ExxonMobil.

Besides oil, Mr Kiyosaki also purchases precious metals.

"I don't save money - I save gold and silver," he said, adding that investing in precious metals helps hedge against governments' misprinting of money. "Those will always be real money." Mr Kiyosaki advised his Singaporean audience to buy gold, especially since goods and services tax on precious metals will be scrapped here come October. This means that investment-grade gold will effectively be 7 per cent cheaper.

He also adds to his long list of properties every year. This includes, he says, more than 4,000 properties around the US, particularly in Texas and Arizona.

He is especially fond of rental properties. "This is what I mean when I say I use debt to get rich - my tenants are the ones who essentially pay the mortgage for me." While most of these properties were predominantly financed by bank loans, land appreciation and continual improvements to the properties have tripled, even quadrupled, the value of some of his initial investments, he said.

Without working, Mr Kiyosaki said he can earn about US$2 million a month, part of which comes from royalties from his book sales.

But whether people choose to invest in commodities and properties like his or not, Mr Kiyosaki is clear about one thing - he wouldn't save money in this economic climate.

"Europe, China and the US are printing trillions of dollars," he claimed. "That means for the next 20 years or so, the purchasing power of paper currency, including the Singapore dollar, is going to go down."

When asked about the difficulties of financing relatively more expensive items, Mr Kiyosaki said, "That's why I tell people to study debt. It can be quite the hand grenade if you don't know anything about it - if you misuse it, it'll kill you."

Young people often tell him that they don't have money, but this situation primes them well to learn about debt, he said.

In a sold-out seminar attended by 3,000 people last Saturday, Mr Kiyosaki recounted how he and his wife bought a few hundred dollars' worth of silver at US$3 an ounce in the 1980s, while still in debt of US$1 million. Today, silver is worth about US$35 an ounce.

"Don't be afraid to start small," he advised.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Asian markets rise after heavy sell-off

HONG KONG: Asian markets climbed on Tuesday and the euro clawed back some of its losses as dealers took a breather from a recent heavy sell-off caused by concerns over the eurozone.

Tokyo rose 0.75 percent as the yen lost some of its recent strength, Hong Kong was 1.03 percent up, Shanghai gained 0.52 percent, Sydney added 1.37 percent and Seoul climbed 0.68 percent.

With little to drive sentiment after the weekend analysts said there was an opportunity to buy after most regional bourses fell into negative territory for the first time in 2012.

The "mostly flat performance in New York, and a pause in the yen's strength are likely to invite some buying" on Tuesday, Rakuten Securities senior market analyst Masayuki Doshida said.

But jitters over the eurozone debt situation and concerns over the state of the global economy are likely to weigh on sentiment, Doshida told Dow Jones Newswires, signalling that any gains may be limited.

On Wall Street the Dow fell 0.14 percent, the S&P 500 was flat and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.46 percent.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called at the weekend for a banking union in Europe, which would be able to provide aid to lenders, especially in Spain, a move that was picking up support in France and at the European Central Bank (ECB). However, Germany remained strongly opposed for the moment.

Global markets have been hammered since the start of May as Europe's debt troubles returned after a Greek general election saw a strong showing for anti-austerity parties, while Spain's bank crisis has left the already creaking economy teetering.

Market players will be looking to the result of a conference call later in the day between the Group of Seven finance ministers to discuss Europe's crisis, in particular Spain's travails.

In Europe the ECB will hold a rate-setting meeting Wednesday, with investors looking to see if it will announce any moves to kickstart the region's stuttering economy.

On currency markets the euro -- which last week hit a 23-month low versus the dollar and a near 12-year low against the yen -- regained a little ground.

The common unit bought $1.2534 and 98.18 yen in early Asian trade, up from $1.2494 and 97.89 yen in New York late Monday. The dollar was flat, buying 78.35 yen.

Oil prices rose in early trade. New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate crude for July delivery, was 85 cents higher at $84.83 a barrel and Brent North Sea crude, also for July, rose by 54 cents to $99.39.

Gold was at $1,621.50 an ounce at 0230 GMT, compared with $1,622.08 late Monday.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Oil retreats on profit-taking, weak eurozone data

SINGAPORE: Oil retreated in Asian trade on Tuesday as investors took profits from overnight gains, while weak eurozone manufacturing data also pressured prices, analysts said.

New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate crude for delivery in May, shed 28 cents to $104.95 per barrel while Brent North Sea crude for May settlement was down 36 cents at $125.07 in morning trade.

Prices had surged in late trade on Monday, supported by stronger-than-expected industrial data in the United States, the world's biggest oil user.

"There has been some profit-taking... from the price surge brought on by US manufacturing data," said Victor Shum, senior principal at Purvin and Gertz international energy consultants in Singapore.

"The manufacturing data that came out from Europe were quite weak, and that has offset the US data and is weighing on prices," he told AFP.

A purchasing managers index (PMI) compiled by Markit research firm showed that eurozone manufacturing activity slumped to a three-month low in March, with major economies Germany and France hit by the slowdown.

The index, a survey of 3,000 eurozone manufacturers, fell to 47.7 points in March, down from 49 points in February.

A score below 50 indicates contraction.

A decline in new orders and rise in oil prices, which weighed on production costs, contributed to the decline in eurozone manufacturing activity, the research firm said.

There were "further signs that the manufacturing malaise already exhibited at the periphery of the currency bloc was spreading to the core," it added.
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