Student is provided with multiple-time UPSC CSE interview-appeared Personal Coach.
Whenever you're stuck, your mentor will help you save time, energy, and money, keeping you on right track. They'll tailor solutions to your preparation stage and background, providing sources, methods, and motivation when needed!
You can discuss everything with your Mentor: Answer Writing, Prelims Preparation, Mains Preparation, Strategy...ANYTHING!
Student is provided with multiple-time UPSC CSE interview-appeared Personal Coach.
Whenever you're stuck, your mentor will help you save time, energy, and money, keeping you on right track. They'll tailor solutions to your preparation stage and background, providing sources, methods, and motivation when needed!
You can discuss everything with your Mentor: Answer Writing, Prelims Preparation, Mains Preparation, Strategy...ANYTHING!
In general, many financial experts support their clientsâ desire to buy cryptocurrency, but they donât recommend it unless clients express interest. âThe biggest concern for us is if someone wants to invest in crypto and the investment they choose doesnât do well, and then all of a sudden they canât send their kids to college,â says Ian Harvey, a certified financial planner (CFP) in New York City. âThen it wasnât worth the risk.â The speculative nature of cryptocurrency leads some planners to recommend it for clientsâ âsideâ investments. âSome call it a Vegas account,â says Scott Hammel, a CFP in Dallas. âLetâs keep this away from our real long-term perspective, make sure it doesnât become too large a portion of your portfolio.â In a very real sense, Bitcoin is like a single stock, and advisors wouldnât recommend putting a sizable part of your portfolio into any one company. At most, planners suggest putting no more than 1% to 10% into Bitcoin if youâre passionate about it. âIf it was one stock, you would never allocate any significant portion of your portfolio to it,â Hammel says.
The global forecast for the Asian markets is murky following recent volatility, with crude oil prices providing support in what has been an otherwise tough month. The European markets were down and the U.S. bourses were mixed and flat and the Asian markets figure to split the difference.The TSE finished modestly lower on Friday following losses from the financial shares and property stocks.For the day, the index sank 15.09 points or 0.49 percent to finish at 3,061.35 after trading between 3,057.84 and 3,089.78. Volume was 1.39 billion shares worth 1.30 billion Singapore dollars. There were 285 decliners and 184 gainers.