Nick Murray
|
Simple Wealth, Inevitable Wealth
—
published
1999
—
9 editions
|
|
|
The Game of Numbers
|
|
|
The Excellent Investment Advisor
—
published
1996
—
2 editions
|
|
|
Behavioral Investment Counseling
—
published
2008
—
2 editions
|
|
|
The New Financial Advisor
—
published
2001
|
|
|
Scripts
—
published
2019
—
2 editions
|
|
|
Serious Money: The Art of Marketing Mutual Funds
by
—
published
1991
—
2 editions
|
|
|
Around the Year with Nick Murray
|
|
|
Gathering Assets: The Best of Nick Murray
—
published
1995
|
|
|
Talking it Over Just the Two of Us
by
—
published
2012
|
|
“If your company has any credible strategy for providing equity-based returns with muted volatility, you have not just a value proposition, but one of the most important value propositions of our time.... What's the concept in an operating real estate REIT? Operating real estate (as distinct from net leases or mortgages, which are other financing concepts) has the potential to produce equity-like long-term returns, but isan extremely powerful diversifier, in that real estate correlates positively with inflation while stocks and bonds correlate negatively with it. Inflation, with it attendant higher interest rates, chokes off new supply of real estate: new expensive to build, to expensive to finance at prevailing market rents. When new supply dwindles, normal growth absorbs the available space and puts upward pressure on rents, increasing cash flows to the owners... until rents get to a point where new construction pencils out again. (Meanwhile, in an inflation/interest rate flareup of any consequence, stocks and bonds are usually getting hit, and sometimes hit hard.) This, to me, is a trifecta of a conceptual value proposition: (a) the potential for the equity-like long-term returns investors need, (b) historically correlated positively with inflation, unlike all financial assets, and (c) just when you think this story can't get better, with 90% of available income paid out currently to income-starved investors.... What's the concept for variable life insurance? It's certainly the least expensive long-term form of life insurance, in that, as the investment portion grows, it extinguishes the insurance company's exposure. (As Ben Baldwin gnomically and brilliantly observes, 'All insurance is term insurance.') It may also be, in a given situation, the cheapest way of funding an estate tax liability, leaving the maximum legacy to one's heirs. And, of course, if the ownership is vested in an insurance trust, one may (under current law at this writing) be bequeathing wealth without income or estate taxation. As long as there is an estate tax - any estate tax - there will be a financial planning issue in the life of every affluent household/family: how do you want the heirs to pay it? And it seems likely that, conceptually, VUL will always be an answer.... Small cap equities? The concept is, clearly, higher returns with - and precisely because of - their higher volatility.”
― The Value Added Wholesaler in the Twenty-First Century
― The Value Added Wholesaler in the Twenty-First Century
“You have to know your product. You have to advocate wholeheartedly for your product. If you take the king's shilling, you must fight the king's wars.”
― The Value Added Wholesaler in the Twenty-First Century
― The Value Added Wholesaler in the Twenty-First Century
“Seven hundred chipmunks don't make a lion. You can never build an excellent practice by trying to effect mass religious conversions among the chipmunks. Excellence may be the ultimate liberation, but it limits you to expending your efforts in search of like-minded excellence. Knowing this, and accepting it as a governing reality of your work, is actually the beginning of a business plan. It tells you to forget about 'market share,' and about the percentage of advisors in your territory who are doing business with you, which are the pure essence of chipmunk statistics.... There are, in your territory, a hundred lifers who can become your partners.... One can only help people who believe they can be helped. Seeing is believing, yes, but it's also true that believing is seeing. A true lifer's clients are happy with him, his advice and his service because if they're not, he shows them the door.... Disciplined diversification is the incredibly courageous decision to forego any chance of making a killing, in exchange for the lif-saving blessing of never getting killed.... Act as if. Fake it 'til you make it. Even if you fear you're not a peer yet, do what a peer does, and keep doing it until you're accepted as a peer.... Confucius said, "It matters not how slowly you go, it matters only that you do not stop."... Mark Twain said that a cat, having once walked on a hot stove, would never walk on a hot stove again... nor on a cold stove. [That's how you get people to overcome regret-based fear.]”
― The Value Added Wholesaler in the Twenty-First Century
― The Value Added Wholesaler in the Twenty-First Century
Is this you? Let us know. If not, help out and invite Nick to Goodreads.



























