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Quotes

Rich Dad,Poor Dad and Bankrupt Dad

“Ricd Dad, Poor Dad” is one of the best sellers on Mumbai’s roads.The author Robert Kiyosaki was exposed as a fraud long time back by real estate veteran John Reed.Yet this did not stop some people from praising this dude as a genius.

Well, guess what, Robert Kiyosaki has now filed for business bankruptcy.

From Forbes:

Robert Kiyosaki, author of the bestselling Rich, Dad, Poor Dad series of financial advice books, is offering his fans yet another lesson in how the rich are different than you and me: they file for bankruptcy not because of ill health or unemployment related issues, but instead as a strategic business move.

Rich Global LLC, one of the corporate arms Kiyosaki has done business under, filed for bankruptcy protection in August, after it was ordered to pay just under $24 million to the Learning Annex and its chairman Bill Zanker.

Kiyosaki was one of the small-time mountebanks who made it to the big-time in the aughts by telling his forever falling behind audience that they could get ahead, they just had not learned how. The shtick behind the Rich Dad books was that Kiyosaki was sharing secret money-making strategies of the wealthy with his wage slave readers. The tips ran the gamut from ridiculous to illegal and downright hurtful and included advocating for insider trading,  arguing for the purchase of multiple real estate properties with little or no money down and telling followers they could purchase stocks on margin via unfunded brokerage accounts.

The Learning Annex was one of Kiyosaki’s earliest backers, and helped arrange a number of his most prominent speaking gigs in the early aughts. They were not alone. Oprah Winfrey had him on her show, and PBS ran his programming during their fundraising weeks.

So how did Kiyosaki, whom the website Celebrity Net Worth estimates is worth a cool $80 million, come to this pass?

Well, he didn’t come to any pass. He now conducts much of his business not via Rich Global LLC but under the rubrik Rich Dad Co. And it’s a corporate bankruptcy, not a personal bankruptcy. When the New York Post, which broke the story, tracked down Mike Sullivan, Rich Dad Co. CEO, he informed them that Kiyosaki would not be putting any of his personal fortune toward the settlement. As for Rich Global, Sulivan claimed it only had a few million in its coffers.

Of course, you could argue that Learning Annex CEO Zanker should have known better. No one has ever proven that Rich Dad, the man who supposedly gave Kiyosaki all his advice for wealthy living, ever existed. Nor has anyone ever documented any vast reserves of wealth earned by Kiyosaki prior to the publication of Rich Dad, Poor Dad in the 1997.

Categories
Links

Linkfest:Oct 11, 2012

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Its turning out to be a miserable year for DLF (Moneycontrol)

How global online freelancers are remaking the outsourcing industry (ET)

Subhiksha’s Subramanian charts comeback plan (Mint)

Dubai losing Billions of $ (Bloomberg)

Low risk trades can become death traps (RPSeaWright)

The 5 Most surreal financial Apocalypses from history (Climateer)

You’re probably not very good at most things (HBR)

Categories
Observations

The Koreans must be crazy

Korean investors “invest” or “trade” as per various themes.This takes momentum trading to a whole new level.

A MID-SIZED sized Korean semiconductor firm named DI makes products with distinctly un-sexy names like “Monitoring Burn-in Tester” and “Wafer Test Board”. It has lost money in each of the past four quarters. And there have been no changes to its fundamentals that might explain why its share price should shoot up from 2,000 to 5,700 won (from $1.80 to $5.12) in the space of just three weeks—including another 15% gain today.

But DI’s chairman and main shareholder, Park Won-ho is no ordinary mortal. He is the father of Park Jae-sang, better known as PSY (as in “psycho”). “Gangnam Style”, if you haven’t heard, is now number one in Britain’s pop charts and number two in America. Local retail investors—referred with the derogatory gaemi-deul (“ants”) by professionals—are piling into DI shares because of it.

Quite how they expect the horse-dancing YouTube phenomenon of 2012 to help DI sell more of its Wafer Test Boards is a mystery. But convoluted investor logic is of course not a new thing. DI is merely the latest example of Korea’s “theme stock”

One of the most common themes has been the marriage stock. When the son or daughter of a company owner weds a chaebol family member, an unusually generous wedding gift may arrive. Back in 2009, shares in a firm named Bolak ran up from 2,000 won to 9,000 won after the owner’s daughter married into the family behind LG. The effects were short-lived: Bolak shares now fetch a more earthly 3,110 won.

The upcoming presidential election has created another subcategory of theme stocks. Following Ahn Chul-soo’s emergence as a political force about a year ago, shares in his company, Ahnlab, ran up from about 20,000 won each to a peak of 167,200 won. Since he declared himself as a candidate, Ahnlab has been crashing: now each share fetches 82,000 won. Ahnlab’s price-earnings ratio is still 87, mind you.

from the Economist

 

We Indians were crazy too…anybody remember K10,Realty and Infra booms ?

Categories
Links

Linkfest:Oct 10, 2012

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Grim readings on the Indian economy (Mint)

DLF SEZ too had Vadra connection (BS)

Should the Govt capitalise public sector banks (HarshVardhan)

In Indian real estate, its Location and Relations (Bloomberg)

How superfast trading hurts small caps (CFO)

This is the best time to buy real estate in the US (DailyReckoning)

Winning by losing-The Power of expectations (AswathDamodaran)

Categories
Links

Linkfest: Oct 09, 2012

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

The long march of P V Rajagopal (Mint)

Dividends driving markets (BS)

Value Trading (ValueInvestorIndia)

Small Cap Stock Ideas (DalalStreet)

Using mutual funds to reduce your tax (OneMint)

The flash crash:Emkay must pay (CapitalMind)

Managed Futures:Still the better diversifier? (ATS)