Friday, April 22, 2016

11 daily habits of self-made billionaires anyone can adopt

11 daily habits of self-made billionaires anyone can adopt

GettyImages 82068626Ethan Miller/Getty
If you want to get rich, start by studying the people who have already done so.
"The only person who can teach you how to think like a millionaire is a millionaire," writes Steve Siebold in his book, "How Rich People Think."
The same could be said about billionaires.
Below, we've rounded up 11 habits of self-made billionaires. You may notice that none of them require dramatic life changes — a few tweaks here and there to your daily routine could result in huge gains.

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They meditate

They meditate
Astrid Stawiarz/Getty
Ray Dalio has an estimated net worth of $16 billion.
Science says that meditation has a number ofmental and physical health benefits, from improving memory to boosting the immune system.
Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, told The Huffington Post, "Meditation, more than anything in my life, was the biggest ingredient of whatever success I've had."
Dalio is not alone. Jack Dorsey, CEO of both Twitter and Square, and media mogul Oprah Winfrey say that they practice meditation daily.

They're charitable

They're charitable
Getty Images / Mike Stobe
Michael Bloomberg has an estimated net worth of $45 billion.
"The world class set their sights on impacting the world with their wealth," Siebold writes. "Some do it through philanthropy, others through business or various financial vehicles."
A handful of billionaires have taken to philanthropy, including founder and CEO of Bloomberg Media Michael Bloomberg, who has donated $3 billion over his lifetime.
And then there's the Giving Pledge, which Warren Buffett and Bill and Melinda Gates created in order to invite the world's wealthiest people to pledge more than half of their wealth to charitable causes either during their lives or in their wills. Some have even pledged to give away more than 99% of their fortunes.

They wake up early

They wake up early
Scott Olson/Getty
Jack Dorsey has an estimated net worth of $1 billion.
There may be some truth behind the age-old adage: The early bird gets the worm.
The wealthiest people tend to be early risers. Take Jack Dorsey, who wakes up at 5:00 a.m. to meditate and work out. Or Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group, who wakes up at 5:45 a.m. to exercise before starting his workday.
Branson and Dorsey aren't the onlysuccessful people who wake up before the sun. In his five-year study of rich people, author Thomas C. Corley found that nearly 50% of them woke up at least three hours before their workday actually began.

They stick to routines

They stick to routines
Kevin Winter/Getty
John Paul DeJoria has an estimated net worth of $3 billion.
A hallmark of highly successful people istheir dedication to ritual.
Take John Paul DeJoria, cofounder of Patron tequila and Paul Mitchell hair products, whostarts every day with five minutes of quiet reflection.
"Doesn't matter where I'm at, which home I'm in, or what hotel room I'm visiting," he says. "The very second I wake up, I stay in bed for about five minutes and just be."

They live below their means

They live below their means
Inc
Bill Gates has an estimated net worth of $78 billion.
Just because they have billions in the bank doesn't mean they have to indulge in overspending — in fact, some of the world's wealthiest people choose to live frugally.
As Murray Newlands wrote at Entrepreneur, "Sam Walton, the founder of Wal-Mart, famously drove around in a 1979 Ford F150 pickup truck ... Mark Zuckerberg owns a modest $30,000 Acura TSX entry-level sedan ... Bill Gates was known to fly commercial for years."
Then there's legendary investor Warren Buffett, who is notably down to earth — he still lives in the same $31,500 home, and chooses a flip phone over a smartphone.

They pursue their passion

They pursue their passion
Justin Sullivan / Getty
Steve Jobs had an estimated net worth of $10 billion.
"You've got to find what you love," Apple cofounder Steve Jobs said during his 2005 commencement address to the graduates of Stanford University. "The only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven't found it yet, keep looking. Don't settle. As with all matters of the heart, you'll know when you find it."
Jobs wasn't the first to emphasize the importance of pursuing your passion. Author Napoleon Hill, who studied over 500 incredibly rich people in the early 20th century, wrote in his bestseller, "Think and Grow Rich": "No man can succeed in a line of endeavor which he does not like."

They read

They read
AP Images
Warren Buffett has an estimated net worth of $69 billion.
Many of the world's most successful peopleare avid readers.
As Business Insider's Shana Lebowitz wrote:
Investing legend Warren Buffettreportedly spends about 80% of his day reading, and continues to include book recommendations in his annual shareholder letters.
In 2015, Facebook's Mark Zuckerbergresolved to read a book every two weeks ... Media mogul Oprah Winfrey selects a book every month for readers to discuss online as part of "Oprah's Book Club 2.0," and when tech billionaire Elon Musk is asked how he learned to build rockets, he reportedly answers, "I read books."

They develop multiple streams of income

They develop multiple streams of income
Michael Buckner/Getty
Richard Branson has an estimated net worth of $5 billion.
The richest people focus on earning — so it comes as no surprise that they develop additional streams of income.
Richard Branson, the billionaire chair of the Virgin Group, epitomizes this habit, Corley explains in "Change Your Habits, Change Your Life." Branson has overseen about 500 companies and his brand is on somewhere between 200 and 300 of them. 
Branson "puts the rich habit of having multiple streams of income on steroids," Corley writes. "His desire to expand the Virgin brand is really a desire to expand his streams of income. Branson learned very early on that this rich habit creates the most wealth."

They're self-employed

They're self-employed
Justin Sullivan/Getty
Mark Zuckerberg has an estimated net worth of $49 billion.
Along the same lines, billionaires tend to be their own bosses. They're typically self-employed and determine the size of their own paycheck.
Mark Zuckerberg has been working for himself since age 19, when he first launched Facebook as a Harvard sophomore in 2004. Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel, who is the youngest billionaire in the world, had a similar path — he created the popular photo-sharing app with two of his former Stanford classmates and has been his own boss ever since.
"It's not that there aren't world-class performers who punch a time clock for a paycheck, but for most this is the slowest path to prosperity, promoted as the safest," says self-made millionaire Steve Siebold, who has also studied over 1,200 wealthy individuals. "The great ones know self-employment is the fastest road to wealth."

They exercise

They exercise
Getty
Mark Cuban has an estimated net worth of $3 billion.
Highly successful people don't just push themselves in the office — they push themselves physically, outside of the office.
Mark Cuban, "Shark Tank" investor and owner of the Dallas Mavericks, does cardio for at least an hour, six to seven days a week,he told The Dallas Morning News.
Branson credits exercise for giving him at least four additional hours of productivity each day. Science concurs: Working out can boost your memory, concentration, and mental sharpness.

They hang out with other successful people

They hang out with other successful people
Rick Wilking/Reuters
Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are longtime friends.
The wealthiest people like to stand next to the smartest person in the room, notes author and podcast host James Altucher: "Harold Ramis did it (Bill Murray). Steve Jobs did it (Steve Wozniak). Craig Silverstein did it (Who? Larry Page). Kanye West did it (Jay-Z)."
After all, "In most cases, your net worth mirrors the level of your closest friends,"Siebold explains.

Starbucks sales disappoint, stock falls 5%

Starbucks sales disappoint, stock falls 5%

Starbucks coffeeReuters/Kim Hong-JiA staff serves beverages at a Starbucks coffee shop in Seoul, South Korea.
Starbucks reported in-line earnings Thursday for its fiscal second quarter, but sales came in a little light and the stock is sliding.
The company reported earnings of $0.39 per share, exactly in line with analyst expectations. Revenue came in at $5.00 billion against expectations of $5.03 billion.
Global comparable store sales, however, grew 6% year over year versus expectations of 6.7% growth. 4% of the growth came from increased purchase size and 2% from increased visitors.
Sales were weaker than expectations in all three regions. US sales growth came in at 7% for the quarter against expectations of 7.4%. China and Asia-Pacific grew sales 3% versus expectations of 4.6% and Europe, middle East, and Africa came in at 1% growth against expectations of 3.4%.
"Starbucks Q2 represented another quarter of solid growth, with the highest revenues of any non-holiday quarter in our history and excellent financial, operating and profit performance," said CFO Scott Mew in a release accompanying the earnings.
After the announcement, the stock has been sliding. As of 4:30 p.m. ET the stock is down around 4.85% at $57.70 a share.
Screen Shot 2016 04 21 at 4.30.24 PMGoogle Finance

Microsoft stock belly-flops on earnings miss, tax hit, and weak guidance

Microsoft stock belly-flops on earnings miss, tax hit, and weak guidance

Microsoft just reported earningsfor the quarter ended March 31, and while it was more or less in line with expectations, the stock dropped more than 5% after hours.
Basically, revenue growth has slowed to a crawl, and investors are not impressed. The company also issued poor guidance for the next quarter and had to make a tax adjustment that hurt earnings.
Here's how the quarter stacked up against Wall Street's expectations:
  • EPS: $0.62 (non-GAAP) vs $0.64 expected. GAAP EPS was $0.47. 
  • Revenue: $22.1 billion  (non-GAAP) vs $22.09 billion expected. GAAP revenue was $20.5 billion.
On the earnings call, the company issued revenue guidance for the next quarter of $21.7 billion to $22.4 billion, below analyst expectations of $23.1 billion. That sent the stock further down after hours. It's now down more than 5% from market close.
Earnings this quarter were affected by a tax adjustment to account for a higher-than-expected annual tax rate, due to a changing geographic mix in Microsoft's sales. Without that adjustment, EPS would have been 4 cents higher, beating expectations, according to investor relations chief Chris Suh.
The difference between GAAP and non-GAAP comes down to $1.5 billion in deferred revenue from Windows 10 sales. Microsoft has often moved revenue gained from sales during the current quarter into future quarters to cover unanticipated costs such as support. 
None of Microsoft's three product lines showed great growth from last year. The segment containing Azure and Windows Server (Intelligent Cloud) did the best, up 3% at $6.1 billion. The segments containing Windows 10 (More Personal Computing) and Office (Productivity & Business Services) were up only 1% each. 
Strangely, Microsoft noted one reason for the drop in More Personal Computing was a 26% decrease in patent licensing revenue, as the Android market shifts to lower cost phones from manufacturers that Microsoft has no agreements with. Microsoft licenses patents to big Android handset makers like Samsung, and at one point was reportedly booking more than $2 billion a year from this business.
Microsoft also told us that cloud revenue had reached a $10 billion "run rate" this quarter — that is, if you took the amount it's earning from cloud services like Azure and Office 365 and extrapolated it out a year, it would generate $10 billion. Azure in particular continues its standout growth, up 120% from last year if measured in constant currency, Microsoft said.
This was the third quarter of Microsoft's 2016 fiscal year, or Q3 Fy2016 in Microsoft-speak.


Google whiffs on earnings, stock gets slammed

Google whiffs on earnings, stock gets slammed

Google parent company Alphabetjust reported its Q1 earnings.
It missed on the top and bottom line and reported weaker-than-expected growth in one of its main ad metrics, and the stock initially plunged about 8% in after-hours trading.
It has leveled slightly to about 6% down.
Here are the most important numbers:
  • Revenue: $20.35 billion, up 17% year-on-year, vs. analyst expectations of $20.38 billion.
  • Non-GAAP earnings per share: $7.50 vs. $7.96 expected.
This is only the second time that the company has broken out its Google business from its "Other Bets," where it reported revenue of $166 million — up from $80 million in Q1 2015 —and operating losses of $802 million, which widened significantly from a loss of $633 million a year ago.
Other Bets include efforts like smart-home company Nest, life-sciences business Verily, and superfast-internet service Fiber, which were highlighted as the primary drivers of that revenue.
"As a reminder, the majority of these efforts are pre-revenue," CFO Ruth Porat said on the earnings call. "We continue to invest across these opportunities, doing so in a disciplined way."
The other important numbers are cost per click, how much Google can charge for its ads, and paid clicks — how many times people click those ads. Cost per click was down 9% vs. -11% expected, and paid clicks were up 29% year-over-year, vs. 32% expected.
On the earnings call, Porat highlighted increased mobile search as a primary driver of revenue growth, thanks in part to new mobile-ad types.
Overall, mobile was a big topic on the call, as Alphabet assured investors that it's primed to make just as much money from smartphones, tablets, and other devices as it has on desktop — traditionally, mobile ads have fetched lower prices. YouTube, the Android app store, Play, and its enterprise-cloud business also got shout-outs as areas where it's seen a lot of promising growth.
Other important numbers:
  • Alphabet increased its headcount to 64,115, a big leap from 55,419 a year before.
  • Google's Other Revenue, which includes its Google Play app store and cloud business,were $2.07 billion, up 24% year-over-year.
  • Google websites revenue was $14.32 billion, up 20% year-over-year, whileGoogle's networks revenue was $3.7 billion, up 3% year-over-year.
  • Websites revenue includes YouTube, and on the call Porat said that YouTube revenue continues to "grow at a very significant rate," although she didn't give any specifics about its revenue.
  • Its operating expenses — other than cost of revenues — were $7.2 billion, or 36% of its revenue, which it says were driven by R&D and costs from headcount.
  • The company's capital expenditures were $2.03 billion.

Some highlights from the earnings call

Google CEO Sundar Pichai said that the company was focused on continuing to make its signature product, Search, more useful and assistive.
"One of the key ingredients behind this push towards greater assistance is AI," Pichai said. "We've long invested in building the best machine-learning team and tools, and we're seeing these efforts bear fruit in many ways."
He also said that the company was seeing "great traction" on YouTube and in the Google Play Store, where it sells apps for its Android operating system. It also said that its enterprise-cloud business is "gaining momentum."
Those are three of the growing businesses that Wall Street sees as having big future potential, although they don't currently drive a lot of revenue compared to search ads.
When asked about the recent spat of negative press around smart-home company Nest, Porat dodged the issue, saying that "Nest products are best-sellers — it's a leading brand in the connected home."

Valeant may have found its new CEO

Valeant may have found its new CEO

The headquarters of Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc., seen in Laval, Quebec November 9 2015.  REUTERS/Christinne MuschiThomson ReutersThe headquarters of Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. seen in Laval Quebec
(Reuters) - Drugmaker Valeant Pharmaceuticals is seeking to appoint Perrigo boss Joseph Papa as its new chief executive, a source familiar with the matter said.
The Canadian drugmaker is negotiating a contract with the Perrigo CEO and it aims to announce his appointment as soon as next week, the source told Reuters. 
However, Perrigo board has not said whether it would allow Papa to void a non-compete clause in his contract, the source said. 
Valeant declined to comment on the "rumors." A call to Perrigo's media contact was not immediately returned.
The Wall Street Journal earlier reported that Valeant was looking to name Papa as next CEO.
Valeant said in March CEO Michael Pearson was leaving the company, just three weeks after returning from a two-month medical leave. The company said at that time Pearson would remain in his post until it finds his successor. 
Debt-laden Valeant has recently settled with some of its lenders after a missed deadline for filing its annual report put the company at risk of a default. It secured an extension until May 31, but has pledged to file its statements toward the end of April. 
Reuters reported last week Valeant had brought in investment banks to review its options amid interest from buyout firms and other companies in its businesses.
Pearson and activist investor William Ackman, who joined Valeant's board last month, have said Valeant was considering selling non-core assets to help cut its $30 billion debt pile.
(Additional reporting by Rama Venkat Raman in Bengaluru; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

The first tech IPO of the year already looks like a bummer

The first tech IPO of the year already looks like a bummer

soccer disappointmentBusiness Insider
SecureWorks, the cybersecurity firm owned by Dell, is expected to IPO on Friday, but at a much lower price than was initially expected.
According to Dow Jones, SecureWorks is pricing its initial public offering at $14 a share, below the range of $15.50 to $17.50 it had hoped to fetch in its filings two weeks ago.
That's a huge disappointment to the overall tech industry, which has been closely watching SecureWorks' IPO process.
There hasn't been a single tech company that's gone public this year, largely because of investors' waning enthusiasm for money-losing companies, and SecureWorks' disappointing IPO could serve as a bellwether for the rest of the year.
SecureWorks generated $339.5 million in revenue last year, up from $262.1 million the year before. But that came at a net loss of $72.3 million, despite having gross profit of $155.7 million last year.
At $14 a share, SecureWorks would have roughly a $1.13 billion market cap.
SecureWorks makes cybersecurity software that helps companies monitor their IT infrastructure to protect against hackers and malware. It is almost entirely owned by Dell, which bought it for $612 million in 2011.

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