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The Importance Of Diversification (Part 1)
'Diversification. It is that one word which invokes fervent debate amongst traders and investors, and is a prime thesis subject in academia. It is also something we haven't yet talked about and will hence do so in this tersely ornamented note.
Nature itself is infinitely diverse - a trait that is often sidelined as a key ingredient to Planet Earth's lasting legacy. The millions, if not billions of species that inhabit Earth has given nature its timeless splendor, and life its immense resilience. Standing the test of time, life has continued despite cryogenic ice ages and cataclysmic super-massive volcanic eruptions.'
'What is it that has given life the triumphant victory over death? Diversity. The very thing that Homo Sapiens have evolved to embrace through the sands of time. It is congenital and appealing to us.
Vibrant pictures strike our retinas harder than those with pale color palates. Dynamic songs resonate so much better in our ears than monotonic trances.
Yet we sometimes loath it, and therein lies the great paradox. But more on this later.
A lifestyle without variety is commonly thought to be boring, one not much better than being deathly acquainted to a rodent running in an endless loop. The maxim that "history never repeats itself but it often rhymes" is perhaps the zeitgeist of the modern conundrum. Is change a better bad or a worse good?
READ MORE:
http://www.businessoffinance.com/ins...vesting-part-1
The Importance Of Diversification (Part 1)
'Diversification. It is that one word which invokes fervent debate amongst traders and investors, and is a prime thesis subject in academia. It is also something we haven't yet talked about and will hence do so in this tersely ornamented note.
Nature itself is infinitely diverse - a trait that is often sidelined as a key ingredient to Planet Earth's lasting legacy. The millions, if not billions of species that inhabit Earth has given nature its timeless splendor, and life its immense resilience. Standing the test of time, life has continued despite cryogenic ice ages and cataclysmic super-massive volcanic eruptions.'
'What is it that has given life the triumphant victory over death? Diversity. The very thing that Homo Sapiens have evolved to embrace through the sands of time. It is congenital and appealing to us.
Vibrant pictures strike our retinas harder than those with pale color palates. Dynamic songs resonate so much better in our ears than monotonic trances.
Yet we sometimes loath it, and therein lies the great paradox. But more on this later.
A lifestyle without variety is commonly thought to be boring, one not much better than being deathly acquainted to a rodent running in an endless loop. The maxim that "history never repeats itself but it often rhymes" is perhaps the zeitgeist of the modern conundrum. Is change a better bad or a worse good?
READ MORE:
http://www.businessoffinance.com/ins...vesting-part-1