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I see 5 pages, without one (sorry, there are a few, but not many) idea for the future. Funny considering the name of the thread: The Exceptional Wealth Accumulation Ideas and Thinking Thread.
Where are the ideas and thinking behind them? I don't see any.
Ok - my 10 cents worth - looking at this in a broader longer term sense so really am not offering a quick fix!
Firstly my take on loosely defining "Exceptional Wealth" is being in a situation where your annual gain in personal equity (Assets - Liabilities) is currently well above $AUD1 million (per year) and your income producing assets eventually allow you to 'retire' (a nebulous concept), lead a comfortable life, and not erode your equity in real terms.
I think there are two aspects to this. The first, mainly focussed on in these forums, is a recipe for gaining the wealth (and I'll discuss this below). The second part though is just as important and that is maintaining and protecting the wealth once gained. This is that part of the financial planning process that includes insurance, estate & succession planning and is part of the risk minimisation process. There are many people who seem to achieve 'exceptional wealth' status but are soon parted from it. This risk minimisation process is worthy of a separate thread at some stage.
In regard to recipes for gaining exceptional wealth my experience from meeting a lot of successful (and otherwise) people is that there really are only three broad methods of gaining it.
1. Inheritance!
Most 'seriously rich' people inherited it (I would class this above the exceptional wealth level). However, many squander it because they do not address the risk minimisation part of the balance.
2. Unique business idea
This is a large group of people, sometimes with poor initial education, that develop a business idea that escalates and they have underlying skills & attitudes that leverage the risk, have a vision, develop the idea and become quite rich. However their initial competitive advantage is often not durable so many have a chequered life - including a bankruptcy or two on the way - and may have little life outside their business. Estate & succession planning are often a longer term problem as well.
3. Professional education
This group is also quite large. They invest significant time and monies into their professional qualification & experience and many earn high incomes. This group includes legal, financial, medical, engineering and other professions. Many equate income to wealth, and do not develop their own financial education and are often led astray by their high cash flow, poor leverage decisions and overzealous financial planners! Those that remain salaried, generally seem to do worst. Some (and it is not a large number) go onto run successful businesses, and are the well paid CEOs and successful entrepreneurs.
I personally use shares as part of 'risk mininimisation' strategy as well as developing some wealth. My underlying asset has come from real estate and my cash flow comes from my professional education. I am seriously developing my own financial education as the 'Financial Planning' sector is in a poor current state.
Sorry - no quick get rich recipe - but there is also much more in life than just money!