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Daily Market Beat
“Hell no!!”
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By Showing You This Secret, I’m Painting
A Huge Target On My Back…
Dangerous as it may be, I need to get the word out, because we don’t have to wait by their heels, begging for scraps any longer.
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t physically fear for my life, or my family…
It’s just that using the exact same techniques that Billionaire investors have built their fortunes upon, makes these powerful people very unhappy.
Let me show you what they know and how easy it is to get rich like they are.
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In Today’s Issue…
Ford: All-American Company (TF)
Taking the First Step (SA)
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Scary Scenario… Ford Still Wins (Tim Fields)
NY Times reporter, Bill Vlasic, just released a new book called “Once Upon A Car” unveils some information about GM and Ford you may have not known.
Back in 2008, as the financial crisis was rearing its ugly head and taking down everything in its path, secretly seeing the potential demise of his company, CEO of GM, Rick Wagoner, decided to approach auto maker, Ford and suggest a merger.
At the time, this was something we would have never expected from Wagoner, but nevertheless, he was turned down with a stiff, “Hell no” and rightfully so.
As a CEO of a company and as the engineer of the locomotive that is responsible for stockholder’s fate, it’s not about helping out another company stay afloat.
It’s about seeking to remain at the top and to destroy competitors.
Ford has always been for me the automaker of choice in regards to quality. After 2008, when they said “no” to Government loans, they reinforced their position.
Business and Government never mixes and it’s refreshing to see companies say “no” when there is a fist full of green waving in their face no matter where or who it came from.
So How Has Ford Done Since The Crisis Began?
Have a look for yourself:
http://untappedwealthonline.com/sites/untappedwealthonline.com/files/ima...
After the crisis hit, the stock was no doubt crushed by the markets. However, the markets got better and the company showed strong earnings…
And their earnings prevailed… lifting the company’s stock from $1.43 per share back in November of 2008 to its current price of $11.70.
So what’s the moral of the story?
Well, don’t do business with the government…
If you’re a good company, doing things right and working towards a profit and keeping costs down, you’ll do well.
Get out of hand with the unions and benefits etc. and you’re looking at a major fall. And in the end – bankruptcy and a deal with the devil himself.
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“It’s All YOUR Fault!” (Shawn Ambrosino)
If there is one thing that drives what Team Trinity writes about on a daily basis, there’s no question to what that one thing is…
You.
Unlike other publications, we actually read what you send us, whether you agree or disagree with our stance on money, business or politics…
Because we actually value your opinion.
The reason I bring this up, is because after reading some of Eric’s “fan” mail today, I felt compelled to hit on a few things from and article he wrote in yesterday’s Daily Market Beat, Playing the Blame Game.
Right now, one of the biggest buzzwords is “class warfare”…
The rich against the poor…
The top 1% aren’t getting taxed…
It’s all George W. Bush’s fault…
Wall Street’s to blame for all of our troubles…
No, the banks are to blame…
Blah, blah, blah.
I’ll tell you what the problem is, but I’ve got to say this first…
You’re not going to like it.
You see, there’s a sickness going on through the media, where everybody is trying to place the blame for our economic problems on everything but the real reasons for this mess.
It’s not the banks, it’s not Wall Street, and believe it or not, it’s not even the federal government…
The only entity to blame for any dour economic mess that you may be facing is you.
And I mean “you” in the hypothetical and editorial sense of the word, because I don’t know whether you’re part of the 1% everybody’s crying about or the 99% getting “fleeced”.
Where were we?
Oh yeah, it’s all your fault…
So, you want to blame the banks for the housing bubble because you lost your home to foreclosure…
What about the fact that no matter how attractive the home or the terms of the loan were, you knew you couldn’t afford that $250,000 house on a $30,000 salary. And now that the 3 or 5 year ARM is way too much for you to afford, you want to blame the bank for it.
Turn that finger back at yourself…
But wait, you want to blame Wall Street for their greed, these people made Billions off of bad investments, yet now my 401K has dwindled down to half or even a quarter of what it was worth 4 years ago.
Well, ask yourself, were you diligent with that money?
Did you manage it? Or did you just expect to put money in and watch it miraculously grow without you needing to do a thing?
I saw the writing on the wall back in 07, and even though my wife disagreed with me, I put all my 401K money into a money market that’s only earning .25%! But guess what, I still have every penny I put in to it, and when things start getting back to good (which I can see them doing sooner rather than later)…
I’ll start playing with it again.
There’s a problem with blaming others for your own troubles as you can see…
While every once in a while, you get screwed, 99.5% of the time, any problems you may have are your own fault.
But…
That should work to the good side too.
When you’re prosperous, who do you give credit too?
Yourself, right? You don’t say, “I’m banking millions because the banks are giving me solid loans…”
You don’t say, “I’m in the money because Wall Street’s humming…”
You say, “Man, I’m doing good. I’ve made the right investments and can see that prudence paying off.”
So if you’re responsible for the good, why are you not responsible for the bad?
It’s like when fat people try to sue McDonald’s for making them fat.
This may sound amazing, but the truth is, McDonald’s has never made ANYBODY fat…
Fat people make themselves fat by making poor decisions, and it’s this same logic that needs to be used now.
It’s normal for people to want to blame others for their own misfortune…
But it doesn’t make it right.
When we make it back to “business as usual” here in America, and trust me, we will…
It’s not going to be because the banks were punished, or Wall Street was heavily taxed, or because the federal government created new jobs…
It’s going to be because everybody will do the fair share.
You can only blame others for so long, till the fact remains that nobody is going to pull you up by your bootstraps, except you.
You want to make more money?
Well, get the knowledge you need to do so…
Whether that be through getting your college degree or an apprenticeship with a master of business. You want to change your life; you do it by changing your thinking.
You’re not going to be prosperous living off handouts or blaming others for being successful…
You’re going to be prosperous by making the right decision, having the drive and perseverance to follow through, and most importantly, keep your eye on the prize.
You want to be able to afford that $1.5 Million house on the water?
Work to get it…
Don’t be satisfied with daydreaming about it.
This is America.
You can be anything you want to be, you can do anything you want to do, it’s all right at your feet…
You just have to take the first step.
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Quote of the day
“My kind of loyalty was loyalty to one’s country, not to its institutions or officeholders. The country is the real thing, the substantial thing, the eternal thing; it is the thing to watch over, and care for, and be loyal to; institutions are extraneous, they are its mere clothing, and clothing can wear out, become ragged, cease to be confortable, cease to protect the body from winter, disease, and death.”
--Mark Twain--
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