Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Retirement The Great Texas (and California) Channel Fight The Texas Teachers’ annuity story continues: “I was excited. I have quite a bit of By Scott Burns / March 26, 2002
Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Retirement They’ve Seen The Future… and Stock Returns Are Lower Two years into a declining market and stocks are still dear. Using traditional measures like By Scott Burns / March 5, 2002
Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Retirement Annuity Income May Increase Portfolio Survival It’s an extension of the old joke--- too much month at the end of the By Scott Burns / February 26, 2002
Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Retirement Revising the Couch Potato Portfolio If stocks are facing a rough future, should a couch potato investor sell his equity By Scott Burns / February 21, 2002
Better Spending Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth A Somber View To a Longer Recession Austin, Texas. On Highway 360, a main highway between the hill country and the Texas By Scott Burns / February 19, 2002
Couch Potato Investing CP portfolio recipes Income & Wealth The Three S’s of Investing: Simplicity, Sloth, Stupor Never forget the three S’s of Investing. Simplicity. Sloth. Stupor. Yes, it’s time for our By Scott Burns / February 3, 2002
Better Spending Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Advisor Fees, Revisited All right, let’s talk. Two recent columns about the true cost of money management brought By Scott Burns / January 15, 2002
Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Retirement Raising Your Imputed Income How would you like to have a steady income that rose regularly, was never taxed, By Scott Burns / January 8, 2002
Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Retirement The 401(k) Casino Imagine a gigantic casino. It’s an enormous room, larger than any you have ever seen. By Scott Burns / December 11, 2001
Couch Potato Investing Income & Wealth Retirement Reinventing 401(k) Plans Eighty percent of all Americans don’t save enough. Nor do they get a high enough By Scott Burns / December 9, 2001
Couch Potato Investing CP portfolio recipes Income & Wealth The Real Cost of Long Term Money Management Could you use an extra $200,000 or so? How about $1,000,000? Then lets examine what By Scott Burns / November 27, 2001