Tuesday, July 27, 2010

ETR: What Jim Brown Knows

Early to Rise
Home | Archives | Contact | Privacy Policy | Whitelist Us | Unsubscribe

Issue No. 3067 - $1.00

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

-----------------------------------------------------Highly Recommended-----------------------------------------------------

You Don't Need Much to Start an Internet-Based Import/Export Business

The Internet has made doing business so much easier in so many markets and niches. And that includes importing products from China for pennies on the dollar and selling them online at a mark-up of 200, 300, even 500 percent or more...

  • You don't need a huge amount of start-up capital. In fact, you can get started with as little as $50 or so... and start making deals almost immediately...

  • You don't need a physical storefront, employees, or equipment. It's just you, your computer, and your Internet connection...

  • You don't need to quit your day job -- yet. You can do Internet import/exporting "on the side."  And once your business takes off, you can go full-time.

This really could be one of the greatest professions in the world. And ALL you need to get started is the insider knowledge you'll get from The China Wholesale Trader.

"Whoever undertakes to set himself up as a judge of Truth and Knowledge is shipwrecked by the laughter of the gods."

Albert Einstein

If You Knew What Jim Brown Knows
By Alexander Green

Jim Brown is arguably the best all-around athlete ever.

He was a track star, one of the nation's finest lacrosse players, averaged 38 points per game on his high school basketball team, and broke NFL records as a running back for the Cleveland Browns. In 2002, The Sporting News named him the greatest football player of all time.

He was pretty handy with a tennis racquet, too. And he liked to wager on his matches.

At a Las Vegas tennis club in 1979, Brown was frustrated when his opponent cancelled a money match at the last minute.

A stranger approached him with a young boy. His proposal -- delivered in a thick foreign accent -- was preposterous. He bet Brown that his nine-year-old son -- short and scrawny even for his age -- could beat him in tennis.

And he was cocky about it. He offered to put up his house.

We can only imagine what ran through Brown's mind as he sized up the half-pint. After all, this wasn't a bet. It was an insult.

The stranger had chosen the wrong man to outrage. Brown wasn't just an athletic phenom. His NFL career could be summed up in his oft-quoted remark, "Make sure when anyone tackles you he remembers how much it hurts."

He countered that they should make the bet an even $10,000.

The club owner tried to warn Brown. And while he did reduce his wager, he wouldn't be talked out of the match, insisting, "The man needs to be taught a lesson."

And so Jim Brown strode off to the courts. With Mike Agassi and his young son Andre in tow.
It didn't take Brown long to recognize his error. He had been hustled.

We seldom deliver lessons in humility. More often than not, we wind up on the receiving end. This is especially true in my bailiwick, the investment arena, where high confidence and big egos are routinely taken down like the Berlin Wall.

Every successful investor develops an abiding sense of humility, a deep respect for the unknowable. What will happen tomorrow or next week is always an open question.

And if you don't know who you are, the stock market is an expensive place to find out. Just ask Victor Niederhoffer.

A professional trader and former finance professor, Neiderhoffer established his reputation as hedge fund great George Soros's partner, managing his fixed income and foreign exchange investments from 1982-1990.

Niederhoffer is a smart guy and an unorthodox thinker, drawing on many disciplines -- including psychology, philosophy, and advanced mathematics -- to make his trading decisions. His 1997 book, The Education of a Speculator, was a New York Times bestseller.

But in the fall of that same year, he got his post-graduate degree. Viewing the Asian market meltdown as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, Neiderhoffer invested his hedge fund in Thai bank stocks, confident the government would never let them fail. He was wrong. His fund quickly lost more than three-quarters of its value and he was forced to close its doors.

Niederhoffer is an experienced, insightful guy. But I wish he'd written The Education of a Speculator after his hedge fund collapsed, not before. That would have been a book worth reading.

Niederhoffer is hardly alone, of course. History has not been particularly kind to all manner of experts and their definitive pronouncements:

  • Anglican Archbishop James Ussher (1581-1656) researched the dates of Biblical events and painstakingly subtracted all the Old Testament generations. When he finished his calculations, he proclaimed that the earth was created on October 23, 4004 B.C. at nine o'clock in the morning. (We now know he missed his mark by 4.6 billion years or so.)

  • In 1899, Charles H. Duell, commissioner of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, proposed shuttering the office. "Everything that can be invented," he said, "has been invented."

  • In 1927, The New York Times heralded Philo T. Farnsworth's new creation, the television, with a front-page article and this subhead: "Few Commercial Possibilities Seen."

  • Walter Lippman, one of the 20th century's most respected journalists and thinkers, wrote in a column dated April 27, 1948, "Among the really difficult problems of the world, the Arab-Israeli conflict is one of the simplest and most manageable."

  • In 1962, a little-known Liverpool group called The Beatles auditioned for Tony Meehan of Decca Records. They performed 15 songs in just under an hour. Decca sent them packing, saying "Guitar groups are on the way out" and "The Beatles have no future in show business."

It's not just the "experts" who flounder, of course. Life is one long lesson in humility. Our perceptions can deceive us. Trust gets misplaced. Knowledge grows and opinions change. Even when the truth is with us, there are often exceptions.

It's natural to seek out experts who can guide us. But outside of physics and chemistry, predictions about the future are best taken with a whole shaker of salt.

We are all swimming in a vast sea of the unknown. The sooner we recognize this -- and embrace it in our personal and business lives -- the better our chances of staying afloat.

[Ed. Note: Alexander Green, Investment Director of The Oxford Club, has more than 20 years of experience as a research analyst, investment advisor, financial writer, and portfolio manager. He is the author of The Secret of Shelter Island: Money and What Matters, as well as the editor of "Spiritual Wealth," a free e-letter about the pursuit of the good life.

Alex is an expert panelist with the Liberty Street League, ETR's exclusive club based on the principles of self-determination and self-responsibility. The League is dedicated to helping members take advantage of under-the-radar, off Wall Street, wealth-building opportunities, including precious metals, Internet businesses, fine art, commodities, real estate, and much more. As a member, the League will also help you keep your money safe from the prying eyes of the government and financial organizations that don't have your interests at heart. Find out more about the Liberty Street League -- and how you can get a free copy of Michael Masterson's book, Ready, Fire, Aim, by signing up for a trial subscription to the Liberty Street League newsletter -- here.]

-----------------------------------------------------Highly Recommended-----------------------------------------------------

This Time Next Year, You Could Be Living Your Dream

Your own cottage on a quiet beach... a grand apartment in a city vibrant with concerts and cafes... a mountain villa where the air is crisp... a vineyard amid gently rolling hills... maybe a full-time maid... plenty of time and funds to travel...

Whatever your ideal retirement looks like, we can help you make it happen. For as little as $649 a month.

For more information or to reserve your seat at the Live & Invest Overseas Conference in Las Vegas, September 16-18, please click here.


"Keep up the great work."

"Another bombshell! Brian Tracy hit the nail squarely on the head with his article on goal setting! I was one of those children criticized by their mother (Mom & Dad divorced). Mom told me I was a loser, and wouldn't be successful.

"I am proving her statement to be futile, foolish.

"Thanks ETR! Keep up the great work!"

Joe

-----------------------------------------------------Highly Recommended-----------------------------------------------------

Bob Bly Is Lazy When It Comes to His Internet Business

When Bob Bly was considering going online several years ago, he was working full-time as copywriter. (He still does.)

So he didn't want to spend a lot of time learning the technical side of an online business... planning marketing campaigns... creating products. He didn't want to be an Internet "guru" or spend 24 hours a day glued to his computer. He just wanted a little side income.

He wasn't sure if it was possible. So he tried a part-time approach. And in the process, he developed a system of working just a couple of hours a day... and making $16,000 to $20,000 a month. This system is not dependent on experience, industry contacts, or technical or marketing knowledge. In fact, anyone can make it work -- especially if you're "lazy."

Today's Words That Work: Bailiwick

A person's bailiwick (BAY-luh-wik) -- from the Middle English for "district of a bailiff" -- is his specific area of interest, skill, or authority.

Example (as used by Alex Green today): "We seldom deliver lessons in humility. More often than not, we wind up on the receiving end. This is especially true in my bailiwick, the investment arena, where high confidence and big egos are routinely taken down like the Berlin Wall."

-----------------------------------------------------Highly Recommended -----------------------------------------------------

Who Ever Heard of Burning Cancer Out of Your Body?

Can the cure for cancer really be as simple as heat? You'll be amazed by the simple but powerful health solutions discovered by our health research team:

  • A cure for heart disease that could eliminate the need for anyone to ever have bypass surgery again

  • An amazing breakthrough that can make you look and feel up to 20 years younger

  • A way to eliminate your "emotional" cravings for food

But read on... because the craziest part is where our team found them...


We want your feedback! Let us know your thoughts on today's issue. Email us at: AskETR@ETRFeedback.com

Whitelist Our Email | Click Here to Unsubscribe | Customer Service | Feed Back

Copyright © 2010 Early to Rise, LLC.

NOTE: If URLs do not appear as live links in your e-mail program, please cut and paste the full URL into the location or address field of your browser. Disclaimer: Early to Rise only recommends products that we've either personally checked out ourselves, or that come from people we know and trust. For doing so, we receive a commission. We will never recommend any product that does not have a 100% money-back satisfaction guarantee.


Nothing in this e-mail should be considered personalized Financial Advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized Financial Advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security recommended to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

To unsubscribe from Early to Rise and any associated external offers, Click here.

To contact us, please visit... http://www.supportatetr.com/helpdesk To cancel or for any other subscription issues, write us at: Order Processing Center


Attn: Customer Service
PO Box 7835
Delray Beach, Florida 33482

1 comment:

  1. Just received a check for $500.

    Sometimes people don't believe me when I tell them about how much you can earn filling out paid surveys online...

    So I took a video of myself getting paid over $500 for taking paid surveys.

    ReplyDelete