Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Building Your Online Portfolio
So you want to start earning online and have invested some of your hard earned cash in a couple of online programs but have you really thought about what you are investing in. You wouldn't simply roll off the street into a real estate agency...

Dramatic Profits From Preconstruction Real Estate Investing
The preconstruction process is an innovative real estate investment opportunity in which you buy tomorrow's property at today's price. Preconstruction investing is a boon for the investor or buyer as well as the developer or builder. The biggest...

Finding Undervalued Stocks. The Graham's Number Technique.
Benjamin Graham (1894-1976) is considered by many to be the architect of Fundamental Analysis and Value Investing. Graham liked to find discrepancies between a stock's price and its value and would buy large portfolios of undervalued stocks,...

Real Estate Investing: Infomercial, Tax Sales And Mentoring Scams
Flipping through late-night infomercials recently, I saw two real estate get-rich quick schemes, and I couldn't help but wonder why people still fall for those old scams? Has anyone really talked a seller out of his home for no money down...

The Magic Of Exponential Business Growth
Is there a 'magical' way to exponentially grow your business? It's about the timeless business principle known as "Re-investment". Look, one of the most exciting times for any new business is the time when effort begins to pay off....

 
Wayne Rogers: From Actor To Super Investor

Wayne Rogers: From Actor To Super Investor

By Bill Knell

It took a tragedy not far removed from Wayne Rogers to wake him up when it came to money and how to handle it. According to an interview he gave to the Financial Intelligence Report, Wayne had first met Peter Falk when the two shared a room in New York City. Falk, an accomplished film, stage and television actor, later suffered a financial trauma not uncommon to many other celebrities. In the 1970s while both the longtime friends were living and working in Hollywood, Peter Falk became a victim of fraud.

Falk lost around $250,000 to a crooked business manager and he wasn't alone. Bad investments had claimed the fortunes of many of Hollywood's Elite. John Wayne almost went bankrupt due to bad investments. Bud Abbot of Abbot and Costello spent his last days dying of cancer and flat broke in Woodland Hills, California. Poor money management and a huge IRS bill claimed the fortunes of both members of the famous comedy team. Jackie Coogan earned over four million dollars as a child star in the 1920's, but lost all his money to his mother and stepfather who had invested badly and wasted the rest on a lavish lifestyle.

These lessons on how celebrities had handled their money were a wake up call to Wayne. He began looking into the world of investing and started his financial empire by purchasing apartment buildings in foreclosure. Rogers started investing with a simple goal in mind. He wanted to hold on to his money and make it grow. He later moved on from real estate to stocks and bonds.

Wayne Rogers has had a distinguished acting career having appeared in films like Cool Hand Luke and Ghosts of Mississippi, as well as having played the unstoppable Capt. John Francis Xavier 'Trapper John' McIntyre in M*A*S*H from1972-1975. He still makes movies and appears on television, but he has also become a superstar in another genre. Rogers has become a force to be reckoned among the elite of super investors.

Wayne Rogers can frequently be seen on Fox News giving investment advice that people are eager to follow. He prefers mutual funds because they limit risk, but also likes commodities. Like many investors, he watches the state of the economy and the performance of individual companies. When it comes to choosing stocks, Rogers prefers many and says that company earnings are the key to deciding which to buy because they drive stock prices.

Charismatic, well-spoken and funny, Wayne Rogers has succeeded in two of the world's most difficult professions: Acting and Investing. The lesson he teaches us is a simple one based on his original investing goal: Hold on to your money and make it grow!

Read more at http://www.billknell.com

About the Author
A native New Yorker now living in Arizona, Bill Knell is a forty-something guy with a wealth of knowledge and experience. He's written hundreds of articles offer advice on a wide variety of subjects. http://www.billknell.com

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.