Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 


Speaking Tour For Solicitors, Accountants, & Trust

Media Release From Charles Drace Investment Consultancy
-------------------------------------------------------

Charles Drace, CFP, has embarked on a speaking tour of New Zealand to share the latest research on the changing economic cycles, the recession, the sharemarkets, and the effects these changes will have on ordinary New Zealanders and international and local businesses.

The generally accepted investment principles that served us well in the rising markets of 1982 to 2000 are proving to be the cause of dramatic losses in current investment portfolios. That's not surprising when you consider that the economic environment for the next 10-20 years will, in many ways, be the exact opposite of that on which current principles are based.

The speaking tour will address:

* How to protect and increase investment portfolios * Understanding the boom and bust cycles and a snapshot view of where we are in the cycle now * The bad decisions made in cycles of exuberance (the 1990's for instance) and how those decisions will impact on all New Zealanders * The importance of long-term historical perspectives; the danger of short-term models * Investment portfolio models, past and future * Why your investments are losing money and what you can, in fact must, do about it * Understanding the importance of socionomics * Why the losses you experienced last year will continue for another 10-14 years. * How to survive the coming world-wide recession

* Investment markets historically go up for an average of 16 years, then go down for an average of 16 years. They went up for 18 years, from 1982-2000, then started back down.

Our guest presenter will be Charles Drace, CFP. A writer, Certified Financial Planner and frequent lecturer on investing themes, Charles has gained the distinction of accurately predicting the current fall in the residential property market (over $8 billion in residential property values have been lost to New Zealanders since his seminal book on the subject was published) AND the fall in the American and international sharemarkets (approx. US$10 trillion has been lost since Charles first started warning the public about the current sharemarket problems). Charles was Runner-up, New Zealand Financial Planner of the Year and is listed in 'Who's Who in the World' for his services to the investment community.

For more information contact: Ruth Sharr, Manager Satori.cc - seminars and publishing See page two for schedule....... PO Box 2850, Christchurch 8015 Tel: 03-365-6607 Fax: 03-364-9132 Email: enquires@satori.cc Seminar Schedule - Solicitors, Accountants and Trustees Speaking Tour

Auckland Thursday 22 November Copthorne Hotel, Anzac Ave. Wellington Wednesday 28 November Copthorne Hotel, Plimmer Towers. Dunedin Thursday 29 November Pacific Park Hotel, Wallace St.

All sessions: 2:30 to 5:00 pm, $180 per person

Seminar schedule for public presentations - a less technical version of the above.

same hotels, same dates, only the public seminars are in the evenings from 7:30 to 9:00 pm, $100 per person.

These seminars are educational; no investment products will be discussed. They are designed to warn as many people as possible about the personal and business harm they will suffer if they don't recognise what's happening in the investment and economic world and how it will affect them. -- Have you read our most recent report? http://www.satori.cc/free-crashreport.html

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 

Sky City : Auckland Convention Centre Cost Jumps By A Fifth

SkyCity Entertainment Group, the casino and hotel operator, is in talks with the government on how to fund the increased cost of as much as $130 million to build an international convention centre in downtown Auckland, with further gambling concessions ruled out. The Auckland-based company has increased its estimate to build the centre to between $470 million and $530 million as the construction boom across the country drives up building costs and design changes add to the bill.
More>>

ALSO:

RMTU: Mediation Between Lyttelton Port And Union Fails

The Rail and Maritime Union (RMTU) has opted to continue its overtime ban indefinitely after mediation with the Lyttelton Port of Christchurch (LPC) failed to progress collective bargaining. More>>

Earlier:

Science Policy: Callaghan, NSC Funding Knocked In Submissions

Callaghan Innovation, which was last year allocated a budget of $566 million over four years to dish out research and development grants, and the National Science Challenges attracted criticism in submissions on the government’s draft national statement of science investment, with science funding largely seen as too fragmented. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: Spark, Voda And Telstra To Lay New Trans-Tasman Cable

Spark New Zealand and Vodafone, New Zealand’s two dominant telecommunications providers, in partnership with Australian provider Telstra, will spend US$70 million building a trans-Tasman submarine cable to bolster broadband traffic between the neighbouring countries and the rest of the world. More>>

ALSO:

More:

Statistics: Current Account Deficit Widens

New Zealand's annual current account deficit was $6.1 billion (2.6 percent of GDP) for the year ended September 2014. This compares with a deficit of $5.8 billion (2.5 percent of GDP) for the year ended June 2014. More>>

ALSO:

Still In The Red: NZ Govt Shunts Out Surplus To 2016

The New Zealand government has pushed out its targeted return to surplus for a year as falling dairy prices and a low inflation environment has kept a lid on its rising tax take, but is still dangling a possible tax cut in 2017, the next election year and promising to try and achieve the surplus pledge on which it campaigned for election in September. More>>

ALSO:

Job Insecurity: Time For Jobs That Count In The Meat Industry

“Meat Workers face it all”, says Graham Cooke, Meat Workers Union National Secretary. “Seasonal work, dangerous jobs, casual and zero hours contracts, and increasing pressure on workers to join non-union individual agreements. More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

 
 
Standards New Zealand

Standards New Zealand
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Business
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news