Investment Newsletter
 Restaurant Newsletters That Pay Off by Walter Mathews, A restaurateur's guide to writing, designing, and publishing a newsletter. This book uses 50 actual newsletters to demonstrate how to create a great newsletter or how to turn an existing one into a more effective marketing tool that will: keep the restaurant's name in front of its customers; introduce new menus, hours, or services; announce coming events; establish its uniqueness; generate more media coverage; and keep customers coming back.
 Investing in Wheat, Soybeans, and Corn by Kelly Angle, Kicks off with an exciting blow-by-blow account of one of the biggest killings in market history. A staggering profit made by a man who had never before traded a single futures contract! Kelly Angle has developed a trading plan based on his experiences and observations of the market. This plan is the basis of his ranked futures newsletter with an average profit each and every year. His complete, usable trading plan is presented in part II of this valuable new book.
Private Equity Analyst - Private Equity Analyst is a newsletter that since 1988 has provided news and information about the private-equity market and its investment specialities, including venture capital, leveraged buyouts, mezzanine investing and turnarounds. Motley Fool - The Motley Fool is a group of financial mavens founded in August 1994 in the USA by brothers Tom Gardner and David Gardner, who parlayed their investment newsletter into a content partnership with America Online service. The Motley Fool gained renown for its early support of the stocks of America Online and Amazon. Investment Banker - An investment banker works for an investment bank and is extremely well compensated. While non-investment bankers often say "i-bankers," investment bankers prefer "investment-banker. Self-directed investment clubs - A self-directed investment club is a type of investment club in which members do not make financial contributions, but rather meet on a regular or informal basis to share stock tips and advice, and then invest in their individual portfolios, not in a common club portfolio (as is more typical of investment clubs). The phrase was coined by financial author and investment club expert Douglas Gerlach in Investment Clubs for Dummies (Hungry Minds, 2001).
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