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Regardless of your own aspirations, your wealth management strategy and framework for managing risk must accommodate competing and sometimes incompatible objectives. You might wish to launch a business, while also creating a strategy to provide a financial safety net in the event of extreme downside market moves. Such goals may seem impossibly incongruous, but they need not be. As we’ve seen, every individual or family needs a framework that delivers on three principal objectives: •     The certainty of protection from anxiety and poverty, or safety. •     A high probability of maintaining your standard of living, or stability. •     The possibility of achieving upward wealth mobility and creating the potential to meet your aspirations.

The Aspirational Investor

Ashvin B. Chhabra

In tennis and in life when you do something you love, appreciate it and respect it by giving it all you can. Never take it for granted because soon enough it will be taken away. Time is tough. Every time you go out on the court be thankful. Be grateful. Believe me, I am. If you are lucky enough to be a tennis player you should recognize that it’s a privilege to be able to walk out on that court and play the game.

Winning Ugly

Brad Gilbert, Steve Jamison

Most technology businesses do not fit Buffett’s pattern of evolutionary change, differentiated products, loyal habitual customers, and few competitors. The few that have the last three—including Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Netflix—are spectacular winners. If change is constant, reinvention must also be.

Big Money Thinks Small

Joel Tillinghast

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