Stop uprooting what you've planted.
There is an investor in the opening pages of this book who never stops working on his money. He reads commentary before breakfast, switches holdings whenever a better idea appears, and is always doing something. After years of motion, he looks at his account and finds uneven income, too much turnover, and the one thing he wanted most quietly missing: compounding that was never given enough time to take root. He didn't plant a forest. He spent years pulling up saplings.
That is the quiet danger The Dividend Forest is written against.
A different question.
A portfolio asks, what is it worth today? A forest asks, what will it shelter for a lifetime? This book is built around that second question. Money, it argues, is never only about money — it is about the life it protects, the choices it opens, and the people it may one day shelter beyond yourself.
What you'll learn.
Across five parts and eighteen chapters, the book follows the natural life of a dividend forest:
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Seller: California Books, Miami, FL, U.S.A.
Condition: New. Print on Demand. Seller Inventory # I-9798199737906