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All Press Releases for April 20, 2005 Subscribe to this News Feed  
 

Anyone Can Be a Billionaire: It’s All in the Circle

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What Donald Trump knows that you don’t know: everything’s a circle.

HOUSTON, TX (PRWEB) April 20, 2005 -- ‘Absolute Intelligence,’ the book by Ilexa Yardley, proposes and proves that everything’s a circle. Yardley is a financial professional, not a scientist or a mathematician, so it stands to reason that her theory would show itself somehow, and somewhere, in the financial community. According to Yardley, Donald Trump, Jim Rogers and Warren Buffett are living proof that her theory is true.

Manipulate Circles, Make Money
“Billionaires are people who make sure their circles produce money,” says Yardley. “They understand that a circle is made up of many pairs, or diameters, and they make sure to organize their pairs, diameters and circles to produce more energy, or heat, or capital than they consume.” This is easier than it seems, because the billionaire formula is simple: make sure assets exceed liabilities, income exceeds expenses, and assets are appreciating at an increasing rate.

One Circle - A Billion Circles
Billionaires understand the circle is conserved; that it repeats and survives, and whatever they do or master in one situation, they can multiply many times over. They realize one, one hundred, one thousand, one million and one billion, are more similar than different, that the number of circles after a one is irrelevant. Billionaires concentrate on the dynamics in one very small circle (the form), and they let demographics and markets deliver the rest (the substance).

Cycles - Circles
Billionaires are subject to the same ups and downs, or cycles in circles as everyone else. Trump, Rogers and Buffett know this, which is why they all stay very closely involved with the day to day decisions involving their assets. Trump does with real estate what Rogers does with commodities and Buffett does with stock. They buy low, sell high, and, like Kenny Rogers’ ‘Gambler,’ “they know when to hold ‘em, and they know when to fold ‘em.”

Opposites - Circles
So how do they know what’s high, what’s low, when to hold, when to fold? Yardley says it’s all in the circle. These men understand the dynamics of circular opposites, and they are willing and capable of doing what others cannot. When markets are rising they sell, when markets are falling they buy, and, though it’s all in the circle, the winning strategy is totally opposite what most people will do.

More-Less, Less-More - Circles
These men are also intensely focused and mentally concentrated on a singular demographic view. Trump circles the wealthy, where people have more then they need, Rogers circles the poor, where people have less then they need, Buffett circles the average, where people have no more or no less than they need. But they all use the exact same circular principles: more is less, less is more and doing the opposite makes the circle produce.

Outsmarting Circles: By Four
Trump, Rogers and Buffett are also willing to establish pricing and benchmarks without waiting for the circle to do it for them. They lead markets and not the other way around, or they tell the circle what it’s going to do, and then the circle does it. Trump does this by pricing four times market, Rogers does it by buying four times below market, and Buffett does it by holding four times longer than the market. All of them know they have to outsmart the circle by four because all circles are comprised of four quadrants or alternating situations (Yardley’s book shows this).

People in Circles
Donald Trump has circled his bankers, showing them they had more to gain by partnering with him than foreclosing on him. Jim Rogers has circled the globe with both a motorcycle and a Mercedes to get a ‘real read’ on commodity demand. Warren Buffett has kept his circle manageable by refusing to buy companies he didn’t understand. The name ‘Trump’ is synonymous with billions; Rogers was a multimillionaire by age 33; Buffett’s stock went from $18 in 1965 to $87,500 today. All of these men control their own circles and not the other way around.

Everyday People – Billionaires in Circles
Yardley says although we love to follow the highs and lows of financial geniuses like Trump, Rogers and Buffett, we are all ‘billionaires,’ once we understand the circle’s dynamics. “A billionaire (in form) is a person who has more than he or she needs, and on some level this is true about all of us.” From Kenny Rogers’ Gambler: “You never count your money when you’re sitting at the table; there’ll be time enough for counting when the dealing’s done.” Understanding circles, according to Yardley, means the dealing’s always done. “Fortunately, the absolute intelligence in Trump, Rogers and Buffett is alive, well and accessible to absolutely all of us.”

See www.absolute-intelligence.com for more information.

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Ilexa Yardley
PRODUCTIVE THINKING CONCEPTS
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