Recipe Portfolio

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Recipe Portfolio

Check Ebay for Recipe Portfolio products.

LANG
LANG "Made From Scratch" Recipe Portfolio Album Cards
Paypal   US $16.99
Lang
Lang "Fresh Watermelon" Online Recipe Portfolio
Paypal   US $20.96
Lang Kitchen
Lang Kitchen "Buon Appetito" Online Recipe Portfolio
Paypal   US $20.96
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Another great place to shop for Recipe Portfolio products is Amazon. They have more than just books!

C.r. Gibson Farm Recipe Card Portfolio C.r. Gibson Farm Recipe Card Portfolio
Sale Price: $9.99

This Recipe Card Portfolio helps keep your recipes protected when not in use. It holds 40 5 x 7 recipe cards, 20 each of two different designs.

C.r. Gibson Sweet Recipe Card Portfolio C.r. Gibson Sweet Recipe Card Portfolio
Sale Price: $9.99

This Recipe Card Portfolio helps keep your recipes protected when not in use. It holds 40 5 x 7 recipe cards, 20 each of two different designs.

Lang Recipe Portfolio - Camborne Lang Recipe Portfolio - Camborne

Home Cooking Portfolio Printer Pages Home Cooking Portfolio Printer Pages

Create your personal recipe collection with one of our Recipe Portfolios from Lang.24 sheets of full color, premium quality, paper. Print your recipe pages right from your home computer! Compatible with most inkjet and lazer printers...

Andy Warhol- Desserts Recipe Portfolio Note Cards Andy Warhol- Desserts Recipe Portfolio Note Cards

We are eager to dig in to some of these Andy Warhol Desserts ourselves! The recipes are from Manhattan's famous treat shop, Serendipity. Warhol and his team sketched as they had coffede in the shop, and the owner began framing and selling the sketches...

Flavors of Provence Recipe Note Card Portfolio Flavors of Provence Recipe Note Card Portfolio
Sale Price: $1.12

If you can“t invite your friends to join you for lunch in Provence, at least send them a recipe note card from our Flavors of Provence: Recipes from the National Gallery of Art portfolio of note cards...


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Recipe Portfolio

Investing: The Solution To The Investment Roller Coaster

Do you feel you're on an emotional roller coaster? If so, you are not alone. The fluctuations of the market are hard for most investors to stomach, and many suffer from financial 'motion sickness' as a result. But making investment decisions under these circumstances is a recipe for disaster. Read on to find out how you can get off the emotional roller coaster of investing.

If you feel that you are on the investment roller coaster--if you lie awake at night worrying about your investments or get a knot in your stomach when you hear the markets have fallen--then you most likely have not allocated your portfolio so that it matches your emotional risk tolerance. Changing the allocation of your portfolio should alleviate this problem.

Investors find themselves on an investment roller coaster when their 'intellectual' risk tolerance doesn't match their 'emotional' risk tolerance. This creates a 'fear/greed' cycle that causes many investors to constantly adjust their portfolio based on short-term circumstances instead of a long-term strategy.

For instance, an investor intellectually agrees with the benefits of equity investing and he decides to put a significant percentage of his money into stock market-based investments. But when the market starts going down, fear grips him and he can't take it. He wants out.

Once the market recovers, his fear turns to greed. The market went up, so why didn't his account? He blames his advisor for not telling him to buy, when in fact the investor didn't act because of fear.

Don't get me wrong. There is nothing wrong with tactically reducing the amount you have invested in equities to protect your money. That's exactly what my proprietary money management system is designed to do. But in this case, I am talking about rapidly changing the long-term strategy based on normal market fluctuations.

The problem isn't necessarily that the investor panics and sells, but that fear then keeps them from getting back into the market when they should. Instead of buying when everyone else is afraid, they wait until the market recovers and it's too late. They sell low and buy high.

Let me give you a real-life example. After meeting together countless times, one of my clients agreed that having approximately 40% of his portfolio allocated to high-quality equities was the best way to help him achieve his goals. We talked extensively about the implications, did extensive research on each investment used, and invested the money.

Within a couple of months, this client was beside himself because he had lost $20,000! But let's put this loss in perspective. Although the market was down several percentage points, his account was down less than 1%. If you can't tolerate a fluctuation of 1% then you shouldn't be in equities.

We reduced his equity percentage down to 7% so he could sleep at night. By the end of that year, the market was up 8%. Most of that gain (as it usually does), came very quickly in a short period of time. And it started (as it usually does) right when nobody thought it could go up.

This client allowed the fear over a 1% loss to prevent him from achieving an 8% gain.

You will only know your true emotional risk tolerance after it has been tested. When tested, we learned that this client's emotional risk tolerance was much lower then expected. Only then were we able to achieve the appropriate portfolio allocation.

That's why it is so important that you have the ability to easily make changes to your portfolio without significant cost. That's why I so adamantly oppose investments that have surrender charges--they cause you to lose your flexibility.

Also, your comfort with investment risk will change over time based on your experience and your situation. This client is becoming more comfortable with normal market fluctuations. We are increasing the percentage he has allocated to equities, but we are doing it slowly.

Recognize that your emotional risk tolerance is probably much less then your intellectual risk tolerance. Start slowly. Build up over time. Be flexible. And work with an advisor who understands and is able to help guide you along the way.

About the Author

Nationally-syndicated financial columnist and Certified Financial Planner Jeffrey Voudrie provides personal, in-depth money management services and advice to select private clients throughout the USA. He will answer your financial question - FREE at http://www.guardingyourwealth.net/

A collection of cleaning tips?

I would like a bunch of people to give me a bunch of different cleaning tips regarding laundry stains and cleaning around the house. Or any cleaning tip for that matter. You know how your Mom or Grandma always had that one cleaning secret? Well I want them all! I'm young and soon will have my own place and I want to make portfolio that is similar to a recipe book full of all kinds of cleaning tips for not only my use, but to be something I can pass down to my daughter or son one day. =) Thanks to everyone who responds!

Vinegar and water is very popular for cleaning.
Mopping
kitchen cabinets
kills odors
kills urine odor
Good for washing the front and out side of the stove. The top if directions, like mine, says not to.
Good in rinse water.for clothes
Good to run through the coffee maker to clean.
Cleans mirrors
glass and good to run through dish washer to clean
kill urine odor in commode
more

Baking soda
cleans the inside of a refrigerator
kills odors in washing clothes

Shaving cream
kills poop odor.

alcohol rubbing
cleans faucets
mirrors.

Putting bleach or vinegar in commode tank and
flushing helps to clean

butter cleans stainless steel sinks

Glass cleaner is a quick way to clean up spots on lanoleum
and shine metal appliances in kitchen.

A broom to clean bathtub.

Bar keepers friend cleans rust and stains off cabinets

The 'billable hour' slips out of favor as lawyers respond to downturn
"Hours are being recognized as an irrational measure of value," said Stephen Ellis, partner at Tucker Ellis & West.

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