One final call out to @AustralianLabor@AlboMP@JEChalmers (or anyone happy to talk long term policy and economics with 100-200k+ Aussie viewers/listeners).
We’ll fly to you, give you an entirely open platform to share your perspectives and policy (not just budget related | no name calling, just honest discussion). We will respect your time.
This is a genuine media opportunity to inform the Australian people about your economic policy.
We’ve already heard from @ajamesbragg at Parliament House yesterday and the discussion will be *extremely popular* (private feedback has been very compelling - goes live Friday).
While I’m a small business owner and represent 200k+ investors (and have been outspoken about the min CGT) I will always approach this with an open mind and let our community decide.
We’re also happy to hear from others, including independents (@DavidPocock@spenderallegra).
DMs are open. If anyone has the ALP ear - come and convince us!
@OwenRask While I agree software engineering skill is becoming less important I think it will be the brand that matters. I’m seeing a lot of saas clones appearing but not making traction due to no brand. At least that’s what I suspect
This tax mistake is going to cost many investors thousands (if not hundreds of thousands). @navexaau walks us through full tax reporting for ETFs & Funds under the new AMIT structure and how to use a “minimise CGT” strategy. In 2 weeks, this podcast has been watched 30,000+ times for over 5,000 hours… in other words - it’s worth it.
Peter Lynch's 10 Benchmark-Beating Commandments:
Peter Lynch took Fidelity Investment's Magellan Fund on a 13-year rampage between 1977 and 1990 to beat the benchmark S&P 500 by more than 2X every year.
Here's 10 of his rules for investing:
Between 1977 and 1990, Peter Lynch's Magellan Fund boasted an average annual return of 29.2%.
$1,000 invested the day Lynch took over the fund, and sold the day he quit, would have turned into $28,000 — a 2,700% total return.
For business owners, paid ads are hard.
I've run ad accounts spending 6 figures a month that were successful.
Then failed with other products to spend even 5 figures per month.
Checkout my latest daily rant, where I discuss my love/hate relationship with paid ads.
https://t.co/Fn1y8Gywsw
I was 12 years old when I started my first business.
That business was Pokemon cards.
It taught me a lot about the markets, even though I had no idea what a market was.
Things like:
- Supply & Demand
- Perception > Reality
- Scarcity
- Human emotions
Listen to the full story on my Youtube channel.
https://t.co/mbBC5UIpdu
"I'll build my own portfolio tracker. How hard can it be".
That was the statement that kicked off a 6 year project, that turned into my first SaaS startup.
Building a business is a brutal journey with massive highs and depressing lows.
But I'd do it all over again and I probably will. #buildinpublic
https://t.co/vyg1rlraXE